Travels in the Central Portions of the Mississippi Valley

Travels in the Central Portions of the Mississippi Valley
Author: Henry Rowe Schoolcraft
Publisher:
Total Pages: 486
Release: 1825
Genre: America
ISBN:

Describes a trip, with Gen. Cass, via the Wabash and Ohio to Illinois and Missouri, returning via the Mississippi and Illinois rivers to Peoria and Chicago. -- Howes, U.S.IANA, S 193.

The Mississippi Valley Historical Review

The Mississippi Valley Historical Review
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 650
Release: 1919
Genre: Electronic journals
ISBN:

Includes articles and reviews covering all aspects of American history. Formerly the Mississippi Valley Historical Review,

Early Midwestern Travel Narratives

Early Midwestern Travel Narratives
Author: Robert Rogers Hubach
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1998
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780814328095

First published in 1961, Early Midwestern Travel Narratives records and describes first-person records of journeys in the frontier and early settlement periods which survive in both manuscript and print. Geographically, it deals with the states once part of the Old Northwest Territory-Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota-and with Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, and Nebraska. Robert Hubach arranged the narratives in chronological order and makes the distinction among diaries (private records, with contemporaneously dated entries), journals (non-private records with contemporaneously dated entries), and "accounts," which are of more literary, descriptive nature. Early Midwestern Travel Narratives remains to this day a unique comprehensive work that fills a long existing need for a bibliography, summary, and interpretation of these early Midwestern travel narratives.

Jolliet and Marquette

Jolliet and Marquette
Author: Mark Walczynski
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2023-08-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0252054725

Often viewed in isolation, the Jolliet and Marquette expedition in fact took place against a sprawling backdrop that encompassed everything from ancient Native American cities to French colonial machinations. Mark Walczynski draws on a wealth of original research to place the explorers and their journey within seventeenth-century North America. His account takes readers among the region’s diverse Native American peoples and into a vanished natural world of treacherous waterways and native flora and fauna. Walczynski also charts the little-known exploits of the French-Canadian officials, explorers, traders, soldiers, and missionaries who created the political and religious environment that formed Jolliet and Marquette and shaped European colonization of the heartland. A multifaceted voyage into the past, Jolliet and Marquette expands and updates the oft-told story of a pivotal event in American history.

Cyclopaedia of American Literature

Cyclopaedia of American Literature
Author: Evert Augustus Duyckinck
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 798
Release: 2024-01-03
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3375177224

Reprint of the original, first published in 1856.

What Jane Knew

What Jane Knew
Author: Maureen Konkle
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 443
Release: 2024-04-30
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

The children of an influential Ojibwe-Anglo family, Jane Johnston and her brother George were already accomplished writers when the Indian agent Henry Rowe Schoolcraft arrived in Sault Ste. Marie in 1822. Charged by Michigan's territorial governor with collecting information on Anishinaabe people, he soon married Jane, "discovered" the family's writings, and began soliciting them for traditional Anishinaabe stories. But what began as literary play became the setting for political struggle. Jane and her family wrote with attention to the beauty of Anishinaabe narratives and to their expression of an Anishinaabe world that continued to coexist with the American republic. But Schoolcraft appropriated the stories and published them as his own writing, seeking to control their meaning and to destroy their impact in service to the "civilizing" interests of the United States. In this dramatic story, Maureen Konkle helps recover the literary achievements of Jane Johnston Schoolcraft and her kin, revealing as never before how their lives and work shed light on nineteenth-century struggles over the future of Indigenous people in the United States.