bokomslag Utah'S Black Hawk War
Historia

Utah'S Black Hawk War

John Alton Peterson

Pocket

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  • 448 sidor
  • 1999
"On Sunday 9 April 1865, Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee met in the parlor of Wilmer McLeans brick home in Appomattox Court House, Virginia, to negotiate the conclusion of the Civil War. That same day, far to the west, a handful of Mormons and northern Utes met in the central Utah town of Manti in an attempt to achieve a peace of their own. Unlike the negotiations at Appomattox, however, those in Manti failed, and the events that transpired there are viewed as the beginning of Utahs Black Hawk War, the longest and most serious Indian-white conflict in Utah history." From the book So begins the story of Black Hawk, Ute Indian warrior chief and brilliant strategist, and Brigham Young, sagacious religious and political leader of the Mormons. Two powerful and unyielding men forged by hardship and conviction, both revered and both reviled in their times. One, orchestrating a remarkable campaign to turn back the tide of white expansion and prevent the extinction of his people, the other, attempting to keep his exiled church and its thriving utopian society sovereign and intact. Two men of distinct races, beliefs, and cultures, but sharing a determination to keep U.S. soldiers out of their bloody conflict for control of land and other resources in the Utah territory. From 1865 to 1867, the warrior Black Hawk, also known as Antonga, led a combined force of Utes, Navajos, and Paiutes in a series of intense stock raids on the Mormon settlements in Utah territory. Black Hawk astutely judged that political conflict between the federal government and Mormon Utah would keep U.S. soldiers from chastising his band. Moreover, the antagonism of Washington toward Utahs polygamy, theocracy, and isolationism made Mormon leader Brigham Young wary of seeking federal help. In fact, to keep the government from using the war as a pretext for sending more troops to Utah, the Mormons withheld information, making the Black Hawk War an almost secret war as far as the rest of the nation was concerned. As directed by Brigham Young, Utahs Latter-day Saint citizens mobilized a church militia, the Nauvoo Legion, to repel Indian attacks. Yet Black Hawk and others were able to carry on their activities for almost eight years without incurring the federal military reprisals that Indians on all four sides of the Mormon heartland experienced. Bloodshed on both sides plunged Mormons and Indians into a war of vengeanceyears of killing and raiding that continued until federal troops stepped in 1872. In this unprecedented volume, historian John Peterson provides the first comprehensive analysis of a unique and compelling chapter of western history and of the violent and protracted conflict it engendered. Utahs Black Hawk War not only explores political intricacies and broader implications, scrutinizing the Mormons' Indian policiesmost notably Brigham Youngs extraordinary "better to feed them than fight them" teachingsbut also presents vivid narrative accounts of various raids and battles. The result is a masterfully researched and engagingly written account of Utahs secret war, a war largely unknown among western history students, scholars, and enthusiastsuntil now. Winner of the Mormon History Association Francis M. and Emily S. Chipman Best First Book Award.
  • Författare: John Alton Peterson
  • Format: Pocket/Paperback
  • ISBN: 9780874805086
  • Språk: Engelska
  • Antal sidor: 448
  • Utgivningsdatum: 1999-01-01
  • Förlag: University of Utah Press,U.S.