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The American West

Page 57

by Robert V Hine

Irish immigrants, 79, 242, 291–92, 328

  Iroquois Confederacy (Haudenosaunee; Five Nations; Six Nations), 45; and the American Revolution, 107–9, 111; and the Beaver Wars, 69; Covenant Chain (alliance with New York colony), 71–72, 85; and European trade goods, 88; and the French and Indian War, 91; Hurons attacked, 69–70; internal and external politics, 45, 86–87; and King George’s War, 87; Ohio claims ceded, 95; post-Revolution resistance, 121; power and influence, 66, 84, 86; spiritual revival, 126–28; Tuscaroras admitted, 86. See also Cayugas; Iroquois peoples; Mohawks; Oneidas; Onondagas; Senecas

  Iroquois peoples: agriculture, 6, 41; architecture, 41–42; Christian converts among, 70–71; fur trade, 43–44; gender roles, 42–43; matrilineal descent, 42; in the Ohio country, 89; population decline, 126; reorganization rejected by, 385; spiritual revival, 126–28; warriors, 86. See also Iroquios Confederacy

  irrigation, 370–71, 378. See also water

  Isabella, Queen (Spain), 14

  Issei. See Japanese immigrants and Japanese Americans

  Italian immigrants and Italian Americans, 328, 337, 356

  Iverson, Peter, 383–84

  Jackson, Andrew, 182; Creeks defeated, 132, 179; and Indian removal, 180, 181; and Texas, 188, 191

  Jackson, Kenneth T., 324, 397

  Jackson, William Henry, 357

  James I, King (England), 56–57, 59

  Japanese immigrants and Japanese Americans, 300–304, 331–32, 336–38

  Jefferson, Thomas: and the Chouteau family, 162; and federal land policy, 115; and the Louisiana Purchase territory, 138–40, 147; and slavery, 118, 179; statehood of western lands anticipated, 117; on the U.S. as “empire of liberty,” 177

  Jeffrey, Julie Roy, 158

  Jemison, Alice Lee, 384

  Jesuit missionaries, 51–53, 69–71, 158. See also Catholic missionaries; Marquette, Jacques

  Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 392

  Jim Crow. See segregation

  Jobs, Steve, 393

  Johnson, Lyndon B., 402, 409, 416

  Johnson, Michael L., 401

  Johnson, Sir William, 107

  Johnson, William, 92

  Jolliet, Louis, 50

  Jordan, David Starr, 322

  Judah, Theodore, 235–36

  Julian, George Washington, 238, 241

  Kaiser, Henry J., 380, 390, 391

  Kallan, Horace, 381

  Kansas: African American communities, 279–82; and the cattle industry, 254; and the Civil War, 213; conflict over slavery in, 210, 211; Depression-era migration from, 374; minority population (map), 425; school segregation challenged, 417; statehood, 200. See also Dust Bowl

  Kansas City, 318, 395

  Kaufman, Polly Welts, 367

  Kearney, Dennis, 257–58

  Kearny, Stephen Watts, Gen., 194, 195, 196

  Kelley, Hall Jackson, 157, 169

  Kelly, William, 229

  Kennedy, Andrew, 177–78

  Kennedy, Burt, 446

  Kennedy, John F., 388, 409

  Kent, Henry, 227

  Kentucky: Battle of the Blue Licks, 110; Boone and the settlement of, 119–20; land ceded by Virginia to, 112; minority population (map), 425; population, 121; statehood, 121, 166, 200

  Kidd, William Winston (Billy), 437

  King, Richard, 238

  King, Rodney, 426

  King Philip’s War, 65–67

  King William’s War, 85, 86

  Kiowa people, 180, 208–9

  Knox, Henry, 122, 123

  Ku Klux Klan, 281, 331

  La Salle, René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de, 50–51

  La Vérendrye, Pierre de Varennes, Sieur de, 141–42

  labor movements, 257–60, 307–9, 330

  Laguna Pueblo, 411

  Lakewood, California, 397

  Lakotas. See Sioux

  L’Amour, Louis, 442–43

  Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 87

  Land Ordinance (1785), 113–15

  land policy, federal: dispersal of public lands halted, 376–77; Homestead Act (1862), 115, 211, 238–41; map of federal lands, 377; national parks and, 358–59; sale of public lands, 115–17, 239–40, 356, 361; survey system, 113–15. See also national forests; national parks; reservations

  land scams, 116–17, 240

  land speculation, 117, 323

  Lapérouse, Jean-François de Galaup, Comte de, 101

  Larkin, Thomas O., 248

  Las Casas, Bartolomé de, 23–26

  Lawrence, Kansas, 210, 213

  Lawton, Henry W., 268

  lead mines, 313

  Leadville, Colorado, 228, 232

  League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), 416–17

  Leatherstocking Tales (Cooper), 159–60, 348

  Leavenworth, Kansas, 318

  Lee, Jason, Rev., 157, 169

  Lee, John D., 278

  Lee, Richard Henry, 117

  Lee, Robert E., 204

  Lenni-Lenapes. See Delawares

  Leopold, Aldo, 436

  Letters from an American Farmer (Crèvecoeur), 115

  Levi’s (jeans), 227, 401, 403

  Levittown, 399–400, 401

  Lewis, Meriwether, 138, 140–43, 145–47, 153

  Lewis, Randall, 427

  Lewis, Sinclair, 295

  Lewis and Clark expedition, 138, 140–43, 145–47, 153

  Lincoln, Abraham, 211, 316, 401

  Lindsay, Vachel, 297

  Lindsley, Marguerite, 367–78

  Lisa, Manuel, 163

  Little Bighorn, Battle of, 263–65, 344

  Little Crow (Sioux chief), 215

  Little Turtle (Miami chief), 124–25, 126, 129

  log cabins, 73, 74, 75–76, 78, 89

  Logan, Greenbury, 189

  logging, 350, 360–63, 364–66, 408–9. See also timber industry

  Lone Ranger, 446

  Long, Stephen H., 148

  Long Island Sound, 63–64

  Longhouse Religion, 128

  longhouses, 41–42

  Longoria, Felix, 416

  Los Alamos National Laboratory, 392

  Los Angeles: airport, 423; ethnic diversity, 424–26; founding of, 100; Japanese residents interned, 337–38; migration to, 330–33; minorities in, 331–37, 416, 417–18, 426; movie industry, 331; oil fields, 331; population (1990), 395; post–WWII era, 387–88; riots, 418, 419, 426; rise of metropolis, 322; suburban development, 324, 397–99; urban flight, 427; water supply, 322–23, 371; Watts area, 333, 418, 419

  Los Angeles Urban Rangers, 428–31

  Louis VIII, King (France), 46

  Louis XIV, King (France), 51, 85

  Louisiana (French/Spanish territory): founding of, 51; French dominion reasserted, 169; sold to U.S., 139–40; Spanish control of, 92, 125, 138–39. See also Louisiana Purchase territory; New Orleans

  Louisiana (state), 166, 185, 200, 425

  Louisiana Purchase territory, 135, 139–40, 147–48, 178, 200. See also Lewis and Clark expedition; and specific states and territories

  L’Ouverture, 139

  Lowie, Robert, 381

  lumber industry, 315, 316

  Lutherans, 291

  Mackenzie, Alexander, 154, 155

  Mackinaw (fort and settlement), 83, 94

  Madison, James, 137

  Magnificent Seven, The (1960 film), 447

  Mahoney, William, 417

  Maidus, 248–49

  Main Street (Lewis), 295–96, 297

  “majority minority” population, 424–26

  Malibu, California, beach access in, 428–30

  Malinche, La (Malintzin), 18–20

  Malthus, Thomas, 78

  Man and Nature (Marsh), 361

  Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, The (1962 film), 448

  Mandans, 141–42; Bodmer’s painting of, 148–49, 150; at Fort Laramie conference, 208; Lewis and Clark and, 141, 145

  Manhattan (New York), 71

  Manhattan, Kansas, 281

  manifest destiny, 3,
177–78. See also expansion

  Mann, Anthony, 446

  Manteo (Roanoke Algonquian), 54, 56

  Manzanar internment camp, 338

  Marquette, Jacques, 50

  marriage: domestic violence, 326–27; in ethnic communities, 294; polygamy, 205–6, 278–79; Tejano-Anglo intermarriage, 187; white-native intermarriage, 27–28, 46, 48–50, 59, 83–84, 98, 162, 165, 219. See also mestizos; métis; women

  Marsh, George Perkins, 361

  Marshall, John, Chief Justice, 181

  Marshall, Robert O., 436

  masculinity and the frontier, 344–48, 369, 383–84

  Massachusetts, 112–13, 116, 200, 425

  Massachusetts Bay Colony, 63. See also Pilgrims; Puritans

  Massasoit, 62

  Masters, Edgar Lee, 296

  Mather, Increase, 67

  matrilineal societies, 34, 42

  Matsumoto, Valerie, 302

  May, Cliff, 400

  May, Dean, 276

  Mayans, 15

  McCone, John, 391

  McCormick reaper, 246

  McKinley, William, 363

  McLoughlin, John, 154–55, 159, 171–72

  McPherson, James, 213

  McWilliams, Carey, 300, 308, 324, 397

  Mead, Margaret, 381

  Means, Russell, 410, 413

  Menéndez de Avilés, Don Pedro, 30–31

  Menominees, 408–9

  Meriam Report, 380–82

  mestizos, 27–28, 34–35, 37

  Metacomet (“King Philip,” Wampanoag chief), 65–67

  Methodists, 157, 274–75

  métis, 50, 83–84, 141, 155

  Mexican Americans: activism of, 421–23; in the armed services, 414–15, 416; farmworkers, 306–9, 420–22; generational conflict, 335; in Los Angeles, 331–32, 333–36, 426; pachuco gangs, 335; political activity, 415–16; school segregation, 417; after the U.S.–Mexican War, 201–4, 306; during and after World War II, 413–23

  Mexican immigrants: cross-border migration patterns, 306–7; deportation of, 333–35; in the early 20th century, 304, 306–7; farmworkers, 306, 307–9, 420–22; in Los Angeles, 331–32, 333–36

  Mexican War, 192–200, 209, 210

  Mexicans: and the California Gold Rush, 225, 229–30; vaqueros, 254. See also Mexican Americans; Mexican immigrants; Tejanos

  Mexico: and Austin’s Texas land grants, 168–69; boundary with the U.S., 200–201; economy, and illegal migration, 423; independence, 166; and Mexican migrant worker strikes, 309; native population, 26; Revolution, 304, 306, 307; social and racial equality in, 186–87; and Texan independence, 187–89; war with the U.S., 192–200. See also New Spain

  Mexico City, 28–29; American campaign for, 196–97, 198. See also Tenochtitlán

  Meyerowitz, Joanne, 326–27

  Miami Indians, 109, 121, 124–25, 180. See also Little Turtle (Miami chief)

  Michigan, 166, 200, 425

  Micmacs, 39–40, 52

  Microsoft, 393, 432–34, 441

  migration: of African Americans, 279–81, 413–14; from California (1990–present), 426–27; and community, 270–72; during the Depression, 374; Great Migration of 1843, 170; of the Iroquois, 111; to Los Angeles, 330–33; post–WWII boom, 394; from reservations to cities, 409; right of, 297–98; of women, to cities, 325–27. See also immigrants; removal of Indians; and specific states, tribes, and immigrant groups

  Miller, Alfred Jacob, 149–50, 151, 153, 164

  Miller, Joaquin, 174

  miners: Chinese, 231–34; Indian, 248–49; Irish, 291–92; Mexican, 225, 229–30. See also Gold Rush; mining

  Mingo Indians, 109, 121

  mining: 20th-century decline, 393–94; copper, 245–46; Denver and, 319; impact on Indians, 248–49, 260; industrial techniques, 227, 228, 350; lead, 313; map of mining areas, 232; mercury, 350–51; mine owners, 245, 320–21; placer mining, 225, 248; and the settlement of the West, 227–28. See also Gold Rush; miners

  Mink, Nicholaas, 451, 454

  Minneapolis and Saint Paul, 319

  Minnesota: Eastern Sioux reservation and uprising, 215, 216; European immigrants in, 292, 293, 294–95; logging in, 350; minority population (map), 425; statehood, 200

  Minnetarees, 141

  Miriam Report, 380–81

  Mississippi, 166, 185, 200, 425

  Mississippi River: as beginning of the West, 10; French claims ceded to Britain, Spain, 91; French exploration and colonization, 47, 50–51; Saint Louis and, 313, 314, 315–16; Spanish control of, 91, 139

  Missouri: Boone’s land grant in, 135; during the Civil War, 212–13; Kansas invaded by proslavery militias from, 210; minority population (map), 425; Mormons in, 205; statehood, 166, 178, 200

  Missouri Compromise, 178, 210

  Missouri Fur Company, 163

  Missouri River: as beginning of the West, 10; and the fur trade, 162–64; Great Sioux Reservation bounded by, 260; Kansas City and, 318; Lewis and Clark’s exploration of, 140, 141, 145, 153; Saint Louis and, 162–63, 313

  Miwoks, 248

  mob violence, 104. See also Paxton Boys; vigilantes

  Moctezuma, 16, 17–18, 20. See also Aztecs

  Mohawks: and the American Revolution, 107–9; Christian converts among, 70–71; and the Dutch, 61; and the Iroquois Confederacy, 45, 69–70; and King Philip’s War, 66, 69; and King William’s War, 85. See also Brant, Joseph; Iroquois Confederacy; Iroquois peoples

  Mohegan casino, 67, 412

  Momaday, N. Scott, 449–50

  Monroe, James, 179

  Montana: mining in, 228, 232, 245–46; minority population (map), 425; ranches in, 254; Sioux resistance in, 260; statehood, 200, 358

  Montcalm, Marquis de, 91

  Montreal, 46, 47

  Mooney, James, 288

  Moran, Thomas, 353–54, 357

  Morgan, Edward, 65

  Mormons: Book of Mormon, 204–5; driven West, 200, 205, 206–7; isolationism vs. industrial development, 318–19; missionaries, 276; Mormon culture in Napoleon Dynamite, 451; polygamy among, 205–6, 278–79; settlement of Utah, 276–78

  Morse, Jedidiah, 137–38

  mountain climbing, 436, 438–40

  movie industry (Hollywood), 331, 390–91

  movies, Western, 442–49. See also specific titles

  Muir, John, 359–60, 363, 364, 365, 371, 372

  Murphy, Mary, 327

  Murrieta, Joaquin, 201, 202

  music, country and western, 401

  Mutchler, J. C., 237

  My Darling Clementine (1946), 445

  Myer, Dillon S., 338, 406

  Nacogdoches, Texas, 167, 168

  Napoleon Bonaparte, 169

  Napoleon Dynamite (2004 film), 450–51, 453–54

  Narragansetts, 39, 40, 64–67

  Narváez, Panfilo de, 21–22

  Nash, Gerald, 393

  Natchez Indians, 84

  National Council of American Indians, 406

  National Forest Service, 364, 366–67, 368, 382

  national forests (forest reserves), 363, 364–66

  national monuments, 364

  National Park Service, 367–69, 431

  national parks, 356–60, 364, 367–69, 431, 434–36. See also specific parks

  Native Americans. See Indians; specific tribes; and headings beginning with Indian

  natural resources, 351, 360–61, 411. See also Dust Bowl; environmental movement; logging; mining; national parks; wildlife, decline and disappearance of

  Nauvoo, Illinois, 205–7

  Navajos: enforced submission of, 217; herds, 35, 37, 385, 385–86; name, 3; Pueblos raided, 37; reorganization rejected by, 385–86; in Stagecoach, 444

  Navarro, Ramon Jil, 230

  Nebraska, 200, 210, 292, 374, 425

  Neolin (Indian leader), 94

  Nevada, 200, 228, 232, 425

  New Deal, 373–74, 376–80, 389; Indian New Deal, 381–86

  New England, 68–69; coastal Indians, 39–40 (see also specific tr
ibes); colonial population growth, 78–79, 80; colonists’ relations with Indians, 62–69; land distribution and settlement, 113. See also Pilgrims; Puritans; and specific colonies, localities, tribes, individuals, and events

  New France: culture and social structure, 46–50, 82–84; earliest trading expeditions to, 41–45; establishment of, 44, 45–46; French and Indian War (1754–63), 90–92; missionaries and conversion of Indians in, 49, 51–53; and the Ohio country, 89–90; population growth, 82; territory claimed, 50–51; trade with the Mandans, 141–42. See also Canada

  New Mexico (Spanish/Mexican): Comanches and, 81, 98; northern settlement strategy, 166; Pike and, 147–48; Pueblo Revolt, 36–37, 81; sheep and cattle, 34; Spanish invasion and colonization, 31–37; U.S. acquisition of, 193, 194, 195, 198–99, 200–201. See also Pueblo peoples

  New Mexico (U.S.): acquisition of, 193, 194, 195, 198–99, 200–201; atomic bomb developed, 392; Civil War and, 212; Elephant Butte Dam, 371; federal campaigns against Apaches and Navajos, 216–17; majority minority in, 424, 425; Mexican-American activism in, 421; and slavery, 210; statehood, 200. See also New Mexico (Spanish/Mexican); Pueblo peoples

  New Netherlands, 71. See also Dutch traders and colonists

  New Orleans, 51, 92, 124, 139–40. See also headings beginning with Louisiana

  New Spain: governance, 29; intermarriage in, 27–28; Mexican independence, 166; mining, 31; native population, 26, 27; Pike and, 147–48; Spanish conquest, 15–20, 21; Texas settlements, 98. See also Mexico; Mexico City; New Mexico (Spanish/Mexican)

  New Sweden, 73

  New York, 71; English-Iroquois alliance (Covenant Chain), 71–72; and the French and Indian War, 90; German settlers in, 79; minority population (map), 425; Mormon church founded in, 204–5; settlement of western New York, 95; statehood, 200; western lands claimed/ceded, 112–13

  newspapers, 198, 234–36

  Newton, Huey P., 418

  Nez Perce tribe, 283

  Nicodemus, Kansas, 280–81

  Nisei. See Japanese immigrants and Japanese-Americans

  Nixon, Richard, 402, 409, 421

  North Carolina, 80, 112–13, 200, 425.

  North Dakota, 200, 374, 425. See also Dakota Territory

  North West Company, 153–55

  Northern Pacific Railroad, 247

  Northwest Ordinance of 1787, 117–19, 122, 178

  Northwest Passage, search for, 41, 44

  Northwest Territory, 112, 113–19, 118. See also Ohio country; and specific territories and states

  Norwegian immigrants, 293, 294–95

  Nueces Strip, 193

  Nye, Bill, 340

  Oakley, Annie, 342–44, 446

  Obama, Barack, 401

 

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