* American occupation of the pays d'en haut, 1796-1831 * Distribution of Indian villages on the eve of war and selected battles * Introduction * Roots of Conflict * A New Onontio * A Mounting Storm * Crisis on the Upper Mississippi * Everything to Lose * Warpath * Final Blows * Losing the Peace * An Indian War * Epilogue * Notes * Acknowledgments * Index
This exceptionally well-researched and elegantly written book is a must-read for those who want to understand better the history of the American frontier and the complexity of wars fought amongst indigenous peoples... John Hall's compelling analysis of the U.S.-Indian diplomacy during the Black Hawk War is instructive as the United States and its allies confront tribal societies in places like Afghanistan and Pakistan while endeavoring to defeat transnational enemies and shape the course of local conflicts that predated our involvement there and are almost certain to continue long after we are gone. -- Brigadier General H.R. McMaster U.S. Army Uncommon Defense shows that the conflict between Black Hawk and the United States was also an 'Indian war' in which Menominees, Dakotas, Ho Chunks, and Potawatomis sided with the Americans against the Sauks, and different tribes had their own agendas, strategies, and experiences. A refreshing look at a story we thought we knew well. -- Colin G. Calloway Dartmouth College John Hall's splendid book is a balanced and comprehensive account of the complex interrelations of the Indian tribes, Army, and settlers in the era of the Black Hawk War. Particularly significant is Hall's analysis of the reasons why the other tribes allied with the Army rather than Black Hawk. -- Edward M. Coffman Emeritus Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison Far from the standard account, this sophisticated analysis of the Black Hawk War illustrates that the conflict was a many-sided affair with tribal people pursuing their own agendas. Well researched - engagingly written. -- R. David Edmunds Watson Professor of American History, University of Texas at Dallas
John W. Hall is Ambrose-Hesseltine Assistant Professor of Military History, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
This exceptionally well-researched and elegantly written book is a
must-read for those who want to understand better the history of
the American frontier and the complexity of wars fought amongst
indigenous peoples.... John Hall's compelling analysis of the
U.S.-Indian diplomacy during the Black Hawk War is instructive as
the United States and its allies confront tribal societies in
places like Afghanistan and Pakistan while endeavoring to defeat
transnational enemies and shape the course of local conflicts that
predated our involvement there and are almost certain to continue
long after we are gone. -- Brigadier General H.R. McMaster * U.S.
Army *
Uncommon Defense shows that the conflict between Black Hawk
and the United States was also an 'Indian war' in which Menominees,
Dakotas, Ho Chunks, and Potawatomis sided with the Americans
against the Sauks, and different tribes had their own agendas,
strategies, and experiences. A refreshing look at a story we
thought we knew well. -- Colin G. Calloway * Dartmouth College
*
John Hall's splendid book is a balanced and comprehensive account
of the complex interrelations of the Indian tribes, Army, and
settlers in the era of the Black Hawk War. Particularly significant
is Hall's analysis of the reasons why the other tribes allied with
the Army rather than Black Hawk. -- Edward M. Coffman * Emeritus
Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison *
Far from the standard account, this sophisticated analysis of the
Black Hawk War illustrates that the conflict was a many-sided
affair with tribal people pursuing their own agendas. Well
researched - engagingly written. -- R. David Edmunds * Watson
Professor of American History, University of Texas at Dallas *
The Black Hawk War of 1832 was a three-month conflict that resulted
in the expulsion of the Sauk nation from Illinois. The war has
often been viewed as a decisive victory by U.S. military forces,
resulting in the seizure of Native American lands for white
settlers. Hall revises that view by examining the military's native
allies in the conflict, namely, the Dakota, Ho Chunk, Menominee,
and Potawatomi, who saw the conflict as an opportunity to inflict
harm on their traditional enemy, the Sauk. Thus, they allied
themselves to the United States, using diplomatic protocols that
dated to the arrival of the French and English in the Great Lakes
region of North America. While the native warriors were looking to
the past for established methods of accommodation to shape their
relationship with the U.S. military, they unwittingly aided the
United States in securing a future for Illinois that excluded all
native peoples...[A] highly recommended work. -- John Burch *
Library Journal *
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