Emigrant Indians

Emigrant Indians
Author: Linda Corey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 139
Release: 1984
Genre: Indians of North America
ISBN:

The End of Indian Kansas

The End of Indian Kansas
Author: H. Craig Miner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 212
Release: 1978
Genre: History
ISBN:

Miner and Unrau show Kansas at midcentury to be a moral testing ground where the drama of Indian inheritance was played out. They related how railroad men, land speculators, and timber operations came to be firmly entrenched on Indian land in territorial Kansas.

The Emigrant Métis of Kansas

The Emigrant Métis of Kansas
Author: Shirley E. Kasper
Publisher:
Total Pages: 481
Release: 2012
Genre: Indians of North America
ISBN: 9781267336842

"Under the US government's 19th century Indian removal policies, more than 10,000 Eastern Indians, mostly Algonquians from the Great Lakes region, relocated in the 1830s and 1840s beyond the western border of Missouri to what today is the state of Kansas. With them went a number of mixed-race people -- the métis, who were born of the fur trade and the interracial unions that it spawned. This dissertation focuses on métis among one emigrant group, the Potawatomi, who removed to a reservation in Kansas that sat directly in the path of the great overland migration to Oregon and California..."--p. iii.

Memories of the Old Emigrant Days in Kansas, 1862-1865, Also of a Visit to Paris in 1867

Memories of the Old Emigrant Days in Kansas, 1862-1865, Also of a Visit to Paris in 1867
Author: Adela Elizabeth Richards Orpen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 350
Release: 1928
Genre: Frontier and pioneer life
ISBN:

"What were the thoughts of a little girl who went out as an emigrant to Kansas in 1862? Who knows what it is to depend on the food to be found there? The terrors of a prairie fire? What it is to see Indians in full war paint filling one's doorway? Who can understand the feelings of fifty women and children left unprotected beyond reach of civilization while their men fought off Confederate raiders and died where they fell without medical care? A visit to paris, described at the book's close, provides contrast and we lose sight of la petite savage as she presses her eye to a knothole of the boarding around the Tuileries to catch a glimpse of hte Prince Imperial at play."--Jacket flap.