This research makes four key historical contributions to the history of U.S. settler expansion into the Northern Great Plains in the nineteenth-century. It demonstrates how Indigenous People adapted their social structures to the violence of the reservation era through the lived experiences of two Dakota families. It shows how U.S. governmental policies actually enabled sexual predation against children and women. It reveals that mainline Christian denominations knew that violence against children was taking place in the U.S. mission and agency system, and tried to cover up what was happening. And it argues that “naming violence” in history will require carefully documenting the sexual violence children experienced in the care of the U.S. government and its agents. The Journal of Social History published this article (Journal of Social History, Volume 53, Issue 1, Fall 2019, Pages 157–193) If you are a student please email me directly.
Courtesy of Santee Pictures
http://oyate1.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=pictures&action=display&thread=664
Courtesy Santee Pictures
http://oyate1.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=pictures&action=display&thread=664
Names come from Grant Anderson, Nebraska History, 60:4, 1979
Photo Courtesy of Jon Brings Three White Horses
Photo: Courtesy Nebraska History, 90: 3, Fall 2009, 114
Courtesy of Santee Pictures
http://oyate1.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=pictures&action=display&thread=664
"The Canada Thistle: The Pestilence of American Colonialisms and the Emergence of an Exceptionalist Identity, 1783-1837,"
Agricultural History, Fall 2016
This research demonstrates how a European plant common to North America since the sixteenth-century, Cirsium arvense, and commonly considered a weed, became “Canadian” when Early National Americans named it the Canada thistle in the years leading up to the War of 1812. This naming comprised part of a host of actions citizens of the new U.S. republic took to differentiate themselves from their imperial progenitor, and as thus, the Canada thistle might be considered an early origin-point of an American exceptionalist identity.
Keywords: weeds, colonialism, American Indians, invasive, culture, American exceptionalism, Early American Republic, borderlands, transnational
One unrecognized aspect of the Diaspora of European Jews in the second half of the nineteenth and the first half of the twentieth-centuries, was the role that farming and agriculture played in integrating these newcomers into their new homes. In my article published in the Western Historical Quarterly in 2010, “Jeffersonian Jews: The Jewish Agrarian Diaspora and the Assimilative Power of the Western Land, 1882-1930,” I demonstrate how Jewish philanthropies enabled European Jews to relocate into rural locations in the western United States and Canada with the aim of proving to non-Jews that Jews could farm and thus were capable of full civic participation and standing. These Jewish agrarians simply desired to farm, but as my article shows, they were also very aware that by living and working on the Western land they possessed a unique right to claim a place in the nation. In a book-length study I will enlarge the scope of this research to include Jewish agrarians in the many locations to which these philanthropies moved Jews: the U.S. and Canada, but also Australia and Argentina. Each one of these nations was undergoing active settlement during this period and utilized settlement programs to place a variety of migratory peoples – not just Jews – into lands they were seeking to dominate.