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Savage brothers : US Indian policies, identity and memory in the American Revolution

As Colin Calloway has noted, American Indians have been accorded a “minimal and
negative role” in historical memories of the American Revolution because – according to
popular mythology – they “chose the wrong side and lost.”1 Such memories are, I argue,
at least partially the result of the failure of United States Indian policies and diplomacy
during the war. An examination of the Journals of the Continental Congress reveals that
these policies were predicated upon the racialized notion that Indians were ‘savages’ that
should be ‘civilized’ and assimilated into American society. Such policies were, I argue,
the product of processes of national identity formation. In the early years of the war,
American leaders eager to form a new national identity separate from that of their British
‘oppressors’ began to identify themselves with Indians as natives of the same land and
thus sought to bring them into the fold of the new nation. Perhaps unsurprisingly,
Indians’ attempts to preserve their own culture and independence in the face of these
policies were met largely with resentment by American leaders. By doing so Indians had,
American leaders believed, rejected ‘civilization.’ They were thus ‘unworthy’ of
inclusion in the American nation. The removal policies that arose in the wake of the Revolution were, I argue, partially an outgrowth of this belief. By removing Indians
westward, American leaders could push them out of both sight and mind while
conveniently forgetting their own diplomatic failures during the war. In the process, they
positioned Indians in popular American memories of the Revolutionary War as ‘savages’
that ‘chose the wrong side and lost.’ / Introduction : the wrong side : a historiography of Indians' involvement in the American Revolution -- We may become one people : the evolution of Congressional Indian policies -- The same island is our common mother : diplomacy on the Revolutionary frontier -- Civilization or death to all savages : Congress's war on the frontier -- By the aid of the full blooded natives : Indians' war for independence -- Epilogue : a civilized people : a digital analysis of the Indian Removal Act's Revolutionary inheritances. / Department of History

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:BSU/oai:cardinalscholar.bsu.edu:123456789/198154
Date03 May 2014
CreatorsWuertenberg, Nathan Paul
ContributorsIngram, Daniel Patrick, 1960-
Source SetsBall State University
Detected LanguageEnglish

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