The Relentless Business of Treaties: How Indigenous Land Became U.S. Property

The Relentless Business of Treaties: How Indigenous Land Became U.S. Property

by Martin Case
The Relentless Business of Treaties: How Indigenous Land Became U.S. Property

The Relentless Business of Treaties: How Indigenous Land Became U.S. Property

by Martin Case

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Overview

The story of "western expansion" is a familiar one: U.S. government agents, through duplicity and force, persuaded Native Americans to sign treaties that gave away their rights to the land. But this framing, argues Martin Case, hides a deeper story. Land cession treaties were essentially the act of supplanting indigenous kinship relationships to the land with a property relationship. And property is the organizing principle upon which U.S. society is based.

U.S. signers represented the relentless interests that drove treaty making: corporate and individual profit, political ambition, and assimilationist assumptions of cultural superiority. The lives of these men illustrate the assumptions inherent in the property system–and the dynamics by which it spread across the continent. In this book, for the first time, Case provides a comprehensive study of the treaty signers, exposing their business ties and multigenerational interrelationships through birth and marriage. Taking Minnesota as a case study, he describes the groups that shaped U.S. treaty making to further their own interests: interpreters, traders, land speculators, bureaucrats, officeholders, missionaries, and mining, timber, and transportation companies.

Odds are, the deed to the land under your home rests on this system.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781681340913
Publisher: Minnesota Historical Society Press
Publication date: 06/01/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

MEA Digital artin Case, freelance researcher and writer, was a key participant in the development of Why Treaties Matter, a collaboration of the Minnesota Indian Affairs Council, the Minnesota Humanities Center, and the Smithsonian Institute.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Lay of the Land
Chapter 1: Speculators, 1873-1800
Chapter 2: Traders, 1800-1812
Chapter 3: Men of Industry, 1813-1829
Chapter 4: Political and Personal Boundaries, 1830-1838
Chapter 5: Bureaucrats, 1838-1848
Chapter 6: Mythmakers, 1849-1858
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
For Further Reading
Index
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