As Benjamin Madley writes in An American Genocide , by 1873, roaming bands of Indian-killers played a major role in reducing native numbers by more than 80 percent. . . . The mass murders raise the question: Did they constitute genocide by official design? [Madley] thinks so. He thoroughly documents the extent of the killings and their horrific consequences. . . . Emphasizing ‘intention and repetition’ in the California massacres, Madley [underscores] the designing role of state and federal officials.”—Alan Taylor, New York Times Book Review , Editors’ Choice“Madley has documented his charge of genocide [with] prosecutorial ferocity. . . . [His] appendices are the most complete incident-by-incident tally ever compiled of Indian lives lost during this terrible period. This scrupulously detailed epilogue is the equivalent of a memorial wall that we are visiting for the first time.”—Peter Nabokov, New York Review of Books “Gruesomely thorough. . . . Others have described some of these campaigns, but never in such strong terms and with so much blame placed directly on the United States government.”—Alexander Nazaryan, Newsweek “By removing any doubt that genocide against Native people took place in the most populous and prosperous state in the US, Madley is aiming for a profound revisioning of US history as a whole. . . . No longer will genocide be something that happened in some distant locale—Namibia, Germany, Cambodia or Rwanda. Instead, it took place in the same sunny clime that American culture has long celebrated with images of fun and frolic: Disney, Hollywood, the Beach Boys and surfers in search of the endless summer.”—Karl Jacoby, Journal of Genocide Research “An American Genocide has settled the issue on whether or not genocide occurred in California.”—William Bauer Jr., Journal of Genocide Research “Madley has written an intensely disturbing and invaluable account of the genocide that white Americans carried out against California’s Indian peoples. . . . Madley’s book should move historians of the American West to consider genocide studies as a serious framework for analysing settler–Indian relations, and it should also compel genocide studies scholars to reconsider their understandings of genocide.”—Margaret D. Jacobs, Journal of Genocide Research “[A] stellar example of an unflinching commitment to document and analyse . . . invasion’s often horrific consequences.”—Jeffrey Ostler, Journal of Genocide Research “Madley moves with a scholar’s care across a terrible landscape. . . . Essential reading.”—Kirkus Reviews “Commanding. . . . No reader of his book can seriously contend that what happened in California doesn’t meet the current definition of ‘genocide.’”—Richard White, Stanford University, Nation “This is the definitive account of California’s genocide on which all future studies will be based.”—Tony Platt, News from Native California “Raises fundamental questions about how Californians and Americans think of themselves and tell their history. . . . An American Genocide provides a powerful tool for historians and Native peoples—including those who are the descendants of genocide survivors—to challenge the founding myths of California and United States history.”—Nicolas R. Rosenthal, Southern California Quarterly “[M]onumental.”—Michael Magliari, H-Net Reviews “Vividly written, this exhaustively researched, abundantly illustrated and mapped, 362-page narrative . . . will become the standard study of the near-extermination of California’s Indians, 1864–73.”—Choice “Comprehensively researched and well-written. . . . An American Genocide courageously challenges the status quo—with primary sources—about how the state and federal government were involved in the decimation of the California Indian tribes.”—True West “Remarkable. . . . A book that should take a lasting place in the way we understand the U.S. and its relations to American Indian people.”—David A. Chang, American Historical Review “Madley has produced a towering book that will long endure as a landmark text in California history. Among its many achievements, this painstakingly researched and thoroughly documented work provides by far the most complete and detailed account ever written about the murderous campaigns waged against Native peoples by the U.S. Army, the California state militia, local volunteer militia units, and irregular bands of self-appointed ‘Indian fighters.’”—Michael F. Magliari, Ethnohistory “Perhaps the most comprehensive case study of California’s Indian genocide yet authored. . . . Madley’s detailed and exhaustive research makes his tome a bookend to decades of research seeking to prove that Native people experienced and survived genocide during the United States’ colonial settlement of California.”—Michel Karp, American Ninteenth Century History “There is no questioning the importance of this book. . . . An American Genocide is an act of restorative justice. . . . Madley assures that some of the dead will not be forgotten, that history records many of their tragic deaths, and that fewer of the perpetrators avoid history’s judgement.”—Steven W. Hackel, Journal of American History “An American Genocide is an important text. Readers interested in Californian history, the gold rush, or Native American history will find this text horrifying but useful. . . . Readers will be stunned and saddened when they read the 191 pages of tables that document killings, massacres, state militia campaigns, and U.S. Army operations against California Native Americans. This inventory of violence should be enough to convince skeptics that genocide did, indeed, occur in California.”—Curtis Foxley, Journal of Native American and Indigenous Studies “Madley . . . [offers] an amazing array of documentation to make his case. . . . An American Genocide is an important addition to American history and genocide studies.”—Clifford E. Trafzer, Holocaust and Genocide Studies Winner, Los Angeles Times Book Award for History2017 Winner, Raphael Lemkin Book Award from the Institute for the Study of GenocideWinner, Charles Redd Center / Phi Alpha Theta Award for the Best Book on the American WestWinner, Gold Medal, California Book Award for CalifornianaWinner, Heyday History Award from Heyday Books Publishing“An American Genocide provides one of the most detailed and stunning narratives of violence, murder, and state-sponsored genocide in North America, making this book a major achievement in the fields of both Native American history and Genocide Studies.”—Ned Blackhawk, author of Violence Over the Land: Indians and Empires in the Early American West and The Rediscovery of America: Native Peoples and the Unmaking of U.S. History "This book is a powerful contribution to the study of Native Americans, to California history, and to genocide studies as a whole. It should be read by every Californian."—Norman Naimark (Stanford University), author of Stalin’s Genocides "Benjamin Madley has changed the conversation on genocide and American Indians. After An American Genocide, it will no longer be possible to debate whether or not genocide took place. Instead we will need to confront the questions of how and why genocide against American Indians took place and what the United States owes its indigenous communities."—Karl Jacoby (Columbia University), author of Shadows at Dawn: A Borderlands Massacre and the Violence of History “California history tells us much about the gold rush and the mass migration it inspired, but very little of the mass destruction of its native peoples. Benjamin Madley corrects the record with his gripping story of what really happened: the actual genocide of a vibrant civilization, thousands of years in the making.”—Governor Jerry Brown“Benjamin Madley’s book is brilliant, unsettling, and necessary. It will change forever how we understand the history of California, and it will make historians of other places and periods wonder what they have missed. An American Genocide will have a long legacy.”—Pekka Hämäläinen, author of The Comanche Empire
Winner of the 2016 Institute for the Study of Genocide's Ralph Lemkin Book Award.
Institute for the Study of Genocide - Ralph Lemkin award
“Madley has produced a towering book that will long endure as a landmark text in California history. Among its many achievements, this painstakingly researched and thoroughly documented work provides by far the most complete and detailed account ever written about the murderous campaigns waged against Native peoples by the US Army, the California state militia, local volunteer militia units, and irregular bands of self-appointed 'Indian fighters.' "—Michael Magliari, California State University, Chico, Ethnohistory
Ethnohistory - Michael F. Magliari
Winner, Inaugural Heyday History Award from Heyday Books
Heyday History Award - Heyday
Winner, Gold Medal, 2016 California Book Award in category of Californiana
Commonwealth Club of California - California Book Awards
True West Best New Western Author 2016
"Madley has written an intensely disturbing and invaluable account of the genocide that white Americans carried out against California’s Indian peoples . . . . Madley’s book should move historians of the American West to consider genocide studies as a serious framework for analysing settler–Indian relations, and it should also compel genocide studies scholars to reconsider their understandings of genocide."—Margaret D. Jacobs, Journal of Genocide Research
Journal of Genocide Research - Margaret D. Jacobs
"An American Genocide has settled the issue on whether or not genocide occurred in California."—William Bauer Jr., Journal of Genocide Research
Journal of Genocide Research - William Bauer Jr.
“Vividly written, this exhaustively researched, abundantly illustrated and mapped, 362-page narrative in nine chapters, which includes 200 additional pages in eight appendixes and an extensive bibliography and index, will become the standard study of the near-extermination of California's Indians, 1864–73.”—Choice
“An American Genocide raises fundamental questions about how Californians and Americans think of themselves and tell their history. . . . An American Genocide provides a powerful tool for historians and Native peoples—including those who are the descendants of genocide survivors—to challenge the founding myths of California and United States history.”—Nicolas R. Rosenthal, Southern California Quarterly
Southern California Quarterly - Nicolas R. Rosenthal
Winner, Los Angeles Times Book Awards in category of History
Los Angeles Times - Los Angeles Times Book Award
2016 Indian Country Today Hot List
"Gruesomely thorough. . . . Others have described some of these campaigns, but never in such strong terms and with so much blame placed directly on the United States government."—Alexander Nazaryan, Newsweek
Newsweek - Alexander Nazaryan
"Commanding. . . . No reader of his book can seriously contend that what happened in California doesn't meet the current definition of 'genocide.'"—Richard White, Stanford University, The Nation
The Nation - Richard White
"This is the definitive account of California’s genocide on which all future studies will be based."—Tony Platt, News from Native California
News from Native California - Tony Platt
“As Benjamin Madley writes in An American Genocide , by 1873, roaming bands of Indian-killers played a major role in reducing native numbers by more than 80 percent. . . . The mass murders raise the question: Did they constitute genocide by official design? [Madley] thinks so. He thoroughly documents the extent of the killings and their horrific consequences. . . . Emphasizing ‘intention and repetition’ in the California massacres, Madley [underscores] the designing role of state and federal officials.”—Alan Taylor, New York Times Book ReviewNew York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice
New York Times Book Review - Alan Taylor
"By removing any doubt that genocide against Native people took place in the most populous and prosperous state in the US, Madley is aiming for a profound revisioning of US history as a whole . . . . No longer will genocide be something that happened in some distant locale—Namibia, Germany, Cambodia or Rwanda. Instead, it took place in the same sunny clime that American culture has long celebrated with images of fun and frolic: Disney, Hollywood, the Beach Boys and surfers in search of the endless summer."—Karl Jacoby, Journal of Genocide Research
“This book is a powerful contribution to the study of Native Americans, to California history, and to genocide studies as a whole. It should be read by every Californian.”—Norman Naimark (Stanford University), author of Stalin’s Genocides
"[A] stellar example of an unflinching commitment to document and analyse . . . invasion’s often horrific consequences."—Jeffrey Ostler, Journal of Genocide Research
“An American Genocide provides one of the most detailed and stunning narratives of violence, murder, and state-sponsored genocide in North America, making this book a major achievement in the fields of both Native American history and Genocide Studies.”—Ned Blackhawk (Yale University), author of Violence Over the Land: Indians and Empires in the Early American West
“Madley has documented his charge of genocide [with] prosecutorial ferocity. . . . [His] appendices are the most complete incident-by-incident tally ever compiled of Indian lives lost during this terrible period. This scrupulously detailed epilogue is the equivalent of a memorial wall that we are visiting for the first time.”—Peter Nabokov, New York Review of Books
New York Review of Books - Peter Nabokov
2016-03-28 It was no accident that California's Indians were slaughtered by the droves in the mid-19th century, writes UCLA historian Madley, but instead the product of design.We know the heyday of genocide, from just before the Gold Rush until the early 1870s, almost only from the Anglo point of view. There's good reason for that: as the author documents, very nearly killing by individual killing, the Native population of California fell from about 150,000 to about 30,000. The word "genocide" is used advisedly, even given such stark numbers, for, as Madley also observes, in many instances the indigenous people fought back, if never with the terrible effect of the Anglo invaders, who imported legal and political institutions that allowed them to justify the slaughter. (Pointedly, the author observes that the killings tapered off at just about the time Indians were allowed for the first time to serve as witnesses in murder trials.) Some of the killings that Madley documents were one-on-one murder; others, such as the spectacularly error-prone campaign against the Modoc that closed the period, involved huge numbers of men: "US Army soldiers, California volunteers, Oregon militiamen, and Indian scouts," to say nothing of howitzers and other heavy weapons, arrayed against a badly outmatched band of Indians in the lava beds of northern California. Somehow, the American casualties were 10 times greater than their quarry's. From massacre to judicial killing to hanging, Madley moves with a scholar's care across a terrible landscape, and while his findings will surprise no student of Native American history or westward expansion, they amount to a depressing but wholly necessary litany. Much of the book—almost 200 pages—is given over to a series of appendices that detail incidents along with the number of people killed, the location, and the historical attestations for each. Dispiriting but essential scholarly reading for students of early modern California.