Read The Red and the White: A Family Saga of the American West Online
Authors: Andrew R. Graybill
Tags: #History, #Native American, #United States, #19th Century
Miller, Emma, 147
Miller, John, 71
mining, 177
see also
gold
Minneapolis, Minn., 60
Minnesota, 19
Minnesota River, 60
missionaries, 78–79, 82, 85, 140
Mississippi River, 12, 13, 20, 60, 64, 70
Missouri, 20
Missouri Fur Company (MFC), 31–33
Missouri River, 8, 9, 12, 13, 15, 27, 31, 35, 40, 41, 43, 47, 50, 84, 97, 121
M. Clarke in upper region of, 71–85
Mistakis
(Rocky Mountains), 21
Mitchell, David, 39, 40
Mix, Tom, 210
Modern Blackfeet: Montanans on a Reservation
(McFee), 243
Mohicans, 48
Montana, 8
author’s visit to, 1–3
changing demographics of, 162–63
in fur trade era,
10
, 30, 35
Helen Clarke as drawn home to, 6, 147, 158–66, 177–78, 184–94
J. L. Clarke’s nearly lifelong residency in, 197, 209
M. Clarke in Upper Missouri region of, 71–85
political evolution of, 86–87
politics in, 163–65
race war in, 93–97
threat to settlers in, 111–12
as transformed by gold rush, 86–89
in turmoil,
106
Montana, University of, 196
Montana Deaf and Dumb Asylum, 206–7
Montana Historical Society (MHS), 1, 93, 152, 159, 195–97,
196
, 236–37, 239
Montana School for the Deaf and Blind, 196, 222
Montana School for the Deaf and Dumb, 222
Montana State Capitol, 235–36
Montana Vigilance Committee, 87, 88, 159
Monteath, James H., 185–86
Montezuma, 85
Morgan, Bob, 238–39
Morgan, Thomas J., 170–71, 175
Morill, Justin, 166
Mountain Chief, 116, 119, 123, 126, 128, 150
Heavy Runner mistaken for, 125–27
son of, 97, 100–101
mourning, Indian rituals of, 25, 147
Museum of the Plains Indian, 231, 233, 235
J. L. Clarke’s friezes for, 231, 233,
234
mutilation of corpses, 32, 45, 64, 95
Napi (Old Man; Creator), 21, 26, 250
napikwans
(“old man persons”; whites), 28, 41–42, 46, 49, 51, 125
Napoleon I, Emperor of France, 11, 14
Natawista, marriage of Culbertson and, 50, 52, 53, 72–73, 83, 257
National Anti-Slavery Standard
, 138
Native Americans,
see
Indians
Navajos, J. L. Clarke’s marketing use of, 216
Nebraska, 171
Nebraska, University of, 2
Nellie Rogers
, 90–91
Ne-so-ke-i-u (Four Bears),
see
Clarke, E. Malcolm
Ne-tus-che-o, see Owl Child, Pete
Never Laughs, 52
New Deal, 228, 291
New France, 27
New North-West
, 110, 131
New Orleans, La., 10–11, 33, 65, 70
“New Policy,” 185
New York, N.Y., 212, 220–21
Blackfeet tourist promotion in, 187
theater in, 4, 153, 155–56;
see also
Clarke, Helen P. “Nellie,” stage career of
as transportation hub, 20, 32
New York Times
, 132–33, 136
Nez Perces, 89, 162, 217
Reservation allotted for, 170
Nez Perce War, 103
Niagara Falls, 65
Nichols, Alice, 164
nita’piwaskin
(“real food”; buffalo meat), 22
Northampton, Mass., 203
North Dakota, 14, 27, 29, 35
North Dakota School for the Deaf (NDSD), 201–4, 207
Northern American West:
adventure-seeking in, 5
Blackfeet control of, 12, 15
harsh climate of, 29, 109, 113, 118,
120
, 121–23, 130
incorporated into U.S., 5, 19–20
influx of whites into, 1–2, 18–19, 32, 42, 59, 62, 83–84, 86, 88, 94,
95
, 121, 162–63, 171, 177
M. Clarke’s childhood in, 60–65
Southwest compared to, 24
Northern Pacific railroad, 182
North West Company (NWC), 28–29, 48, 124
Northwest Ordinance, 19
Oberammergau, Bavaria, 218
Ohio, 40
Ohio River and Valley, land grants in, 19, 20
oil, discovery of, 171, 180, 245
oil barons, 171
Ojibwas, 37, 62–63
Oklahoma,
172
, 282
oil discovered in, 171, 180
Omahkoyis (Big Tree Lodge; Glacier Park Lodge), 183
101 Ranch, 180
“150% men,” 243, 244
O’Neill, Mary, 190
oralism, manualism vs., 203–4
Orozco, José Clemente, 228
Otoe-Missourias:
allotment of, 6, 171, 173–75,
175
, 178–81, 192
background of, 282
Owl Child, Pete, 98–102, 109, 117, 128, 184, 255
Owl Woman, 4
Owyhee Avalanche
, 131
“Palace of the Prairie,” 171
Parker, Ely, 132
Peace Commission, 135, 138
peace medals, 14, 16, 126
Pease, William B., 131–32, 140
Pennsylvania, 20, 168–70, 200
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 212, 218, 219, 289
Pericles, 165
Phil Kearny, Fort, 122
Phillips, Wendell, 139
Piegan, Fort, building and burning of, 39
Piegans, 2, 74, 92, 108, 112, 185
Assiniboine attack on, 43–45,
44
burial customs of, 147
childhood of, 45
Coulter’s encounter with, 30–31
friezes depicting traditional life of, 227–31
fur trade and, 8–9, 39
gender-based roles of, 46–47
as “Glacier Indians,” 190
and guns, 24–25
Helen Clarke’s generosity to, 191
Horace Clarke’s ambivalence toward, 5–6
horses owned by, 24
Joe Kipp scorned by, 143–44
Lewis’s violent encounter with, 15–18, 30
as local color, 183, 223
in Marias Massacre, 109–10, 125–33, 136, 137
in M. Clarke’s murder, 5, 7
population of, 25
in race war, 94–97
renaming of landscape features by, 193–94
as “scabby robes,” 14
smallpox among, 43
in tribal warfare, 25–26, 96–97
U.S. Army campaign against, 105–6, 114–30
U.S. relations with, 15
violence against, 76–77
warrior image of, 25–26
white intruders as viewed by, 9, 28–29
Piegan War, 93–97
Pikunis,
see
Piegans
Piotopowaka (the Bird That Comes Home),
see
Clarke, Helen P. “Nellie”
piskun
(buffalo jump), 22, 228–29,
230
Plains Indian Sign Language (PISL), 204, 211, 212, 227
Plassmann, Martha, Horace Clarke’s interview with, 141–43, 145–46, 151
Platte River, 30, 115
Plummer, Henry, 88
pneumonia, 192
Pocahontas, 243
Poe, Edgar Allan, 55
Poinsett, Joel, 71
Point, Nicolas, 78–79
politics:
in Montana, 163–65
in temperance movement, 42
see also specific parties
polygyny, 46, 80, 92–93, 256
Poncas, allotment of, 6, 171–72, 174–75, 178, 179–81, 192
Ponca Trail of Tears, 171
ponokaomita
(“elk dog”; horse), 23
Potomac, Army of the, 116
Potts, John, 30, 31
Prairie du Chien, Treaty of (1825), 63
Pratt, Richard Henry, 167–70,
169
Prickly Pear Valley, 120
Clarke ranch at, 92, 97, 98, 104, 105, 146, 151–52
Priest Butte, 122
printing press, 203
public opinion:
backlash in, 115, 121, 129, 131–33
humanitarian, 134, 137–40
Purdy, W. Frank, 212
Quebec, founding of, 27
racial classification, 3, 82
racially blended people, 142
bias against, 82–83, 154–55, 161–63, 165, 186, 189, 197, 214, 264
Blackfeet predominance of, 242–43
commercial promotion through heritage of, 215–16
contemporary challenges of, 245
enclaves of, 84–85
evolving gulf between whites and, 162–63, 165, 197
in government bureaucracy, 189–90
Helen Clarke as champion of, 154, 178, 193
lack of documentation of, 3, 45, 52, 84
rejection of heritage by, 237
social dislocation of, 4, 155, 158–59, 161, 164, 185
two worlds of, 4, 6, 150, 191, 194, 237, 242–45
see also specific individuals
Racine, Albert, 226, 231
railroads, 20, 65, 89, 116, 143, 181
Railsback, Edmund O., 164
Rapid City, S.Dak., 231
Raymond, Fort (Fort Manuel), 30, 31
Reconstruction era, 2, 164, 244
Red Horn, 123
Red Man
, 170
Red River, 84–85, 115
reform, reformers:
abolitionist, 137–41, 166, 275
for black suffrage, 162
Indian, 114, 115, 121, 137–41, 225, 227;
see also
allotment policy; Carlisle Indian School
misguided paternalistic goals of, 167–68, 174
in temperance movement, 42
Republican Party, 161, 163, 166, 179
reservations:
breakup of,
see
allotment policy
depiction of life on, 153–54
as goal of reform, 114
Riplinger (fur trader), 124
Rivera, Diego, 228
robe press, 37
Roblin, Charles, 186–87
Rockefeller, Abby, 217
Rockefeller, David, 217, 290
Rockefeller, John D., as patron of J. Clarke, 6, 197, 216–18, 219, 223
Rockefeller, John D., Jr., 216–17
Rocky Mountain goat, carvings of,
207
, 211, 217, 219, 225, 235, 239, 240
Rocky Mountains, 21, 40, 48, 92, 113, 121, 123, 146, 177, 183
Rolfe, Thomas, 243
Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 227
Roosevelt, Theodore, 167, 181, 183
Ross, Reuben, 71
Royle, Edwin Milton, 153–55
Rupert’s Land, 28
Russell, Charles Marion, 225, 236, 289
buffalo skull icon of, 210
marriage of, 214
support for J. L. Clarke by, 209–11, 213, 215, 222
Russell, Nancy, 214
Sacagawea, 14, 243
Saint-Domingue (Haiti), slave uprising on, 11
St. Francis, Wis., 207
St. John’s School for the Deaf, 208–9
St. Lawrence River, 27, 48
St. Louis, Mo., 13, 15, 34, 76, 77, 90, 200, 209, 243
St. Peters
, 43
Sand Creek Massacre, 2, 4, 110, 115, 134
Sanders, Harriet, 160
Sanders, Helen Fitzgerald, 190–91
Sanders, James, 160, 180
Sanders, Wilber Fisk, 159–60, 163–65, 175, 179, 180, 266, 279
Sandoval, Isidoro, 92
San Jacinto, Battle of, 69
Santa Anna, Antonio López de, 68–69
Saukamappee, 250
scalp dance, 76
scalps, scalpings, 24, 25, 26, 45, 95
scarlet fever, 6, 146, 198–200
Scheurele, Joe, 289
School of American Sculpture, 212
Schultz, James Willard, 193–95, 257
Scotland, 85
Scott, Dred, 258
Scott, Martin, 60–61, 258
Scott, Walter, 157
Scott, Winfield, 60, 67
scurvy, 60
Second Dragoons, 118
“See America First” slogan, 182–83
Seen From Afar, 50
“seizers” (U.S. troops), 97
Senate, U.S., 135, 166
Seven Years’ War (1756–1763), 18, 58
Seymour, Thomas, 58
Sharp, Joseph Henry, 191
Shaw, Fort, 97, 105, 107,
107
, 109, 110, 116, 118,
120
, 121, 129, 200, 272
historical marker for,
144
Shaw, Robert Gould, 118
Shenandoah Valley, 114, 115, 119
Sherburne, J. H., 188–90
Sheridan, Philip H., 119,
119
, 130, 272
accolades for, 131
aggressive Indian campaign strategy of, 113–17, 121, 135
condemnation of, 137, 138
“good Indian” as “dead Indian” comment of, 113
as “Little Phil,” 113
in Marias Massacre debate, 133–34
Sully’s conflict with,
108
, 111, 114
on transfer initiative, 135
Sherman, Eleanor, support of J. L. Clarke by, 220–22, 229
Sherman, John, 135, 166
Sherman, William Tecumseh, 103–4,
108
, 130, 275