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HISTORY - North America
 
Sort By: Products per Page:
  12   [NEXT > >] Displaying 1 to 15 of 16
By James D. Lodesky
This book attempts to discover the names of the first Polish settlers in Illinois, when they came to Illinois and their stories when possible. Some left complete stories about themselves while others only a very small amount. The time period starts in 1818, the year Illinois became a state and ends in 1850. I found much more information between 1818 and 1850 then I thought I would so I cut the book off at 1850. The Polish settlers are divided into five different categories. 1. Polish Political Exiles from Russia. 2. Polish emigrants from mainly German occupied Poland. 3. Polish Jews. 4. People of Polish descent, those persons with a Polish ancestor. 5. Emigrants from an undetermined county whose last names look Polish.
FORMAT: E-Book
OUR PRICE:
$9.99
By James D. Lodesky
This book attempts to discover the names of the first Polish settlers in Illinois, when they came to Illinois and their stories when possible. Some left complete stories about themselves while others only a very small amount. The time period starts in 1818, the year Illinois became a state and ends in 1850. I found much more information between 1818 and 1850 then I thought I would so I cut the book off at 1850. The Polish settlers are divided into five different categories. 1. Polish Political Exiles from Russia. 2. Polish emigrants from mainly German occupied Poland. 3. Polish Jews. 4. People of Polish descent, those persons with a Polish ancestor. 5. Emigrants from an undetermined county whose last names look Polish.
FORMAT: Softcover
OUR PRICE:
$23.99
By James D. Lodesky
This book attempts to discover the names of the first Polish settlers in Illinois, when they came to Illinois and their stories when possible. Some left complete stories about themselves while others only a very small amount. The time period starts in 1818, the year Illinois became a state and ends in 1850. I found much more information between 1818 and 1850 then I thought I would so I cut the book off at 1850. The Polish settlers are divided into five different categories. 1. Polish Political Exiles from Russia. 2. Polish emigrants from mainly German occupied Poland. 3. Polish Jews. 4. People of Polish descent, those persons with a Polish ancestor. 5. Emigrants from an undetermined county whose last names look Polish.
FORMAT: Hardcover
OUR PRICE:
$34.99
By Friends of the Future
Paniolo House Stories Volume 1 includes interviews with Yoshio Hara, Eva Kealamakia, Elizabeth Kimura, Hisa Kimura, Mary Bell Lindsey, Katy Lowrey. Volume 2 includes interviews with Dan Miranda, Bea Nobriga, Blanche Rapoza, Grace Shigematsu, Ichiro Yamaguchi, and Shigeko Yoshikami. The purpose of the Paniolo House Stories project is to guide the restoration of a hundred-year-old paniolo (cowboy) family home, as a living museum of daily life, health and healing practices before World War Two in the ranching town of Waimea on the island of Hawai`i. The Paniolo House is to be a museum which perpetuates the local history of families and life in this special town of Waimea. Friends of the Future’s Paniolo House Committee works in partnership with the North Hawaii Community Hospital, where the house is located. In this way, the North Hawaii Community Hospital honors its historical community roots and keeps community values central to its continuing success. In order to gather the stories on which to base the interpretive exhibits at the Paniolo House, the Paniolo House Committee initiated a project to collect oral history interviews with twelve kupuna, or elders, from the Waimea community. These interviewees kindly shared their stories for the project. The Paniolo House Committee continues to guide the renovation and interpretation of the Paniolo House as a living history museum to help connect the eldest and the youngest generations in the Waimea community. The Paniolo House Committee has been blessed by the dedicated work of Wally and Marge Bright, Balbi Brooks, Jean and Gilbert Davis, Barbara and Nelson Elliott, Gordon Hills, Hisa and Elizabeth Kimura, John and Katy Lowrey, Maile Melrose, Bea Nobriga, Nancy Piianaia, Phyllis Richards and Quentin Tomich. The Committee was founded in 1995 in conjunction with the North Hawaii Community Hospital, with Susan Pueschel helping at the start. Assisting the Paniolo House Committee is Susan Maddox of Friends of the Future with David Tarnas as project manager and Tom Quinlan as the architect specializing in restoring historic buildings. Four members of the Committee who generously assisted the Paniolo House project, but who have passed away in recent years, are Nelson Elliott, Gordon Hills, Hisa Kimura, and John Lowrey. Nancy Piianaia was the Humanities Scholar for Paniolo House Stories and main interviewer with the assistance of Maile Melrose. Megan Mitchell transcribed the interviews. Nancy Piianaia was chief editor with the assistance of Alexander Tarnas and David Tarnas.
FORMAT: Softcover
OUR PRICE:
$26.99
$22.94
By Friends of the Future
Paniolo House Stories Volume 1 includes interviews with Yoshio Hara, Eva Kealamakia, Elizabeth Kimura, Hisa Kimura, Mary Bell Lindsey, Katy Lowrey. Volume 2 includes interviews with Dan Miranda, Bea Nobriga, Blanche Rapoza, Grace Shigematsu, Ichiro Yamaguchi, and Shigeko Yoshikami. The purpose of the Paniolo House Stories project is to guide the restoration of a hundred-year-old paniolo (cowboy) family home, as a living museum of daily life, health and healing practices before World War Two in the ranching town of Waimea on the island of Hawai`i. The Paniolo House is to be a museum which perpetuates the local history of families and life in this special town of Waimea. Friends of the Future’s Paniolo House Committee works in partnership with the North Hawaii Community Hospital, where the house is located. In this way, the North Hawaii Community Hospital honors its historical community roots and keeps community values central to its continuing success. In order to gather the stories on which to base the interpretive exhibits at the Paniolo House, the Paniolo House Committee initiated a project to collect oral history interviews with twelve kupuna, or elders, from the Waimea community. These interviewees kindly shared their stories for the project. The Paniolo House Committee continues to guide the renovation and interpretation of the Paniolo House as a living history museum to help connect the eldest and the youngest generations in the Waimea community. The Paniolo House Committee has been blessed by the dedicated work of Wally and Marge Bright, Balbi Brooks, Jean and Gilbert Davis, Barbara and Nelson Elliott, Gordon Hills, Hisa and Elizabeth Kimura, John and Katy Lowrey, Maile Melrose, Bea Nobriga, Nancy Piianaia, Phyllis Richards and Quentin Tomich. The Committee was founded in 1995 in conjunction with the North Hawaii Community Hospital, with Susan Pueschel helping at the start. Assisting the Paniolo House Committee is Susan Maddox of Friends of the Future with David Tarnas as project manager and Tom Quinlan as the architect specializing in restoring historic buildings. Four members of the Committee who generously assisted the Paniolo House project, but who have passed away in recent years, are Nelson Elliott, Gordon Hills, Hisa Kimura, and John Lowrey. Nancy Piianaia was the Humanities Scholar for Paniolo House Stories and main interviewer with the assistance of Maile Melrose. Megan Mitchell transcribed the interviews. Nancy Piianaia was chief editor with the assistance of Alexander Tarnas and David Tarnas.
FORMAT: Hardcover
OUR PRICE:
$36.99
$33.29
By Donald Stinnett
No Description Available.
FORMAT: Softcover
OUR PRICE:
$20.99
$17.84
By Donald Stinnett
No Description Available.
FORMAT: Hardcover
OUR PRICE:
$30.99
$27.89
By Archie Eschborn
The Dragon in the Lake takes readers on a wild rideto the coastal waters of Honduras, into Mexico,Canada and the United States to explore one ofNorth Americas most enigmatic underwaterarcheological sites. Investigated and researched bymany in the past, none have covered thisunderwater archeological mystery first hand likearcheological researcher Archie Eschborn.

Learn of the mysterious mathematical relationshipsthat the ancient underwater pyramidal structures inWisconsin have with their larger pyramid neighborssouth of the border at Teotihuacan. Where theseancient Wisconsin stone monuments actuallynavigational beacons for trade and commerce forthe pure copper from Michigan's upper peninsula?Learn the explosive truth about the possibleorigins and connections between the pyramidbuilders of ancient Mexico and the links toAmerica's prehistoric Mound Builders..

Eschborn and his research team spent 5 yearsinvestigating the ancient stone structures at thebottom of Rock Lake Wisconsin, in hopes ofseparating fact from fiction. The author's "out ofthe box" approach to explain the archeology ofthis site and by using a new method of LandscapeArcheology to prove the manmade nature ofWisconsin's submerged prehistoric rock structuresis fascinating.

The author's unique background in history andarcheology coupled with his project managementskills have allowed him to tackle this controversialsite and understand its complexities beyondlooking at conventional archeological artifacts likestone arrowheads or pottery shards to determinethe origins of these underwater rock structures.

* * * * *


Archie Eschborn, President of Rock Lake Research Society

In the cold murky depths of a Wisconsin lake lay mysterious rock structures wrapped in NativeAmerican folklore and local legend. These ancient underwater manmade structures maybe themost significant and controversial North American archeological discovery of the 20th century.Follow a small band of amateur archeologists armed with the latest technology as they strive tobring new research into the open against entrenched academic agenda’s and Mother Nature‘sattemps to prevent them from documenting and preserving these submerged structures beforetime and man erase them from existence.

The author provides compelling new evidence along with countless professionals,scientists, geologists, researchers, archeologists, anthropologists and divers, who have challengedthe status quo of the Wisconsin Historical Society who have clung to their erroneouspronouncements about the fabled “Rock Lake Pyramids” in the first half of the twentiethcentury.

Take a journey every armchair adventurer/archeologist has dreamed of taking. Weaving a talethat takes the reader from Honduras, to Mexico, to Rock Lake and beyond, delving into thelittle known world of the pyramids and effigy mounds of Southern Wisconsin. Discover ancientcopper mining in northern Michigan, to the trade routes that reached deep into Mesoamericaand to early Aztecs who once lived near the sacred shores of this lake. The reader will discoverthe overwhelming similarities between these North American “pyramid builder cultures” thatcan no longer be dismissed as coincidence. This exciting, educational ride may soon have someWisconsin state institutions in turmoil due to the explosive nature of these findings and theirpotential impact to change the thinking about pre-columbian migration and trade routesbetween present day Mexico and Wisconsin.

“The Dragon in the Lake is an up to date report of dramatic new information altering orexpanding the panorama of American prehistory,” Editor-in-Chief - Ancient American Magazine

“The new discoveries in this book will make a strong case for the ultimate protection of thisunderwater archeological time capsule that some state archeological authorities have beenreluctant to address,” Dr. James Scherz - Professor Emeritus -University of Wisconsin
FORMAT: Softcover
OUR PRICE:
$22.99
$19.54
By Archie Eschborn
The Dragon in the Lake takes readers on a wild rideto the coastal waters of Honduras, into Mexico,Canada and the United States to explore one ofNorth Americas most enigmatic underwaterarcheological sites. Investigated and researched bymany in the past, none have covered thisunderwater archeological mystery first hand likearcheological researcher Archie Eschborn.

Learn of the mysterious mathematical relationshipsthat the ancient underwater pyramidal structures inWisconsin have with their larger pyramid neighborssouth of the border at Teotihuacan. Where theseancient Wisconsin stone monuments actuallynavigational beacons for trade and commerce forthe pure copper from Michigan's upper peninsula?Learn the explosive truth about the possibleorigins and connections between the pyramidbuilders of ancient Mexico and the links toAmerica's prehistoric Mound Builders..

Eschborn and his research team spent 5 yearsinvestigating the ancient stone structures at thebottom of Rock Lake Wisconsin, in hopes ofseparating fact from fiction. The author's "out ofthe box" approach to explain the archeology ofthis site and by using a new method of LandscapeArcheology to prove the manmade nature ofWisconsin's submerged prehistoric rock structuresis fascinating.

The author's unique background in history andarcheology coupled with his project managementskills have allowed him to tackle this controversialsite and understand its complexities beyondlooking at conventional archeological artifacts likestone arrowheads or pottery shards to determinethe origins of these underwater rock structures.

* * * * *


Archie Eschborn, President of Rock Lake Research Society

In the cold murky depths of a Wisconsin lake lay mysterious rock structures wrapped in NativeAmerican folklore and local legend. These ancient underwater manmade structures maybe themost significant and controversial North American archeological discovery of the 20th century.Follow a small band of amateur archeologists armed with the latest technology as they strive tobring new research into the open against entrenched academic agenda’s and Mother Nature‘sattemps to prevent them from documenting and preserving these submerged structures beforetime and man erase them from existence.

The author provides compelling new evidence along with countless professionals,scientists, geologists, researchers, archeologists, anthropologists and divers, who have challengedthe status quo of the Wisconsin Historical Society who have clung to their erroneouspronouncements about the fabled “Rock Lake Pyramids” in the first half of the twentiethcentury.

Take a journey every armchair adventurer/archeologist has dreamed of taking. Weaving a talethat takes the reader from Honduras, to Mexico, to Rock Lake and beyond, delving into thelittle known world of the pyramids and effigy mounds of Southern Wisconsin. Discover ancientcopper mining in northern Michigan, to the trade routes that reached deep into Mesoamericaand to early Aztecs who once lived near the sacred shores of this lake. The reader will discoverthe overwhelming similarities between these North American “pyramid builder cultures” thatcan no longer be dismissed as coincidence. This exciting, educational ride may soon have someWisconsin state institutions in turmoil due to the explosive nature of these findings and theirpotential impact to change the thinking about pre-columbian migration and trade routesbetween present day Mexico and Wisconsin.

“The Dragon in the Lake is an up to date report of dramatic new information altering orexpanding the panorama of American prehistory,” Editor-in-Chief - Ancient American Magazine

“The new discoveries in this book will make a strong case for the ultimate protection of thisunderwater archeological time capsule that some state archeological authorities have beenreluctant to address,” Dr. James Scherz - Professor Emeritus -University of Wisconsin
FORMAT: Hardcover
OUR PRICE:
$32.99
$29.69
By Peter Shaw

        Killing Joaquín begins in 1519 with the arrival in Mexico of Joaquín’s ancestor Juan Murrieta, who is part of the Spanish invasion force led by Hernan Cortez.
        The early part of the book relates the family’s background in Mexico and the social reality that motivates the northward migration of the Murrietas during three centuries of avoiding the Spanish boot their own family had once worn.
        The political structure in Colonial Mexico is as follows: Spaniards born in Spain, Spaniards born in Mexico, Mestizos, and Indians, in order of descending power. The people in Spain think of the Spaniards in Mexico as subordinate intermediaries necessary in the extraction of wealth from the colonized country.
        Time widens the gap, and the colonists become separate from the people who had originally sent them to Mexico as agents of subjugation and avenues of revenue.
        Their lowered status compounds the far greater duality that is soon caused by the genetic blending of Spanish and Indian people throughout Mexico, whereby the majority of the population becomes both the oppressor and the oppressed, which is a major component of the Mexican Dilemma.
        In 1776, there are fewer than one hundred non-Indian people in the entirety of California, and not all of them are Hispanic. The children born here to the largest of these settler groups are the first generation of the Califorñios – people born in California of Spanish-speaking parents.
        The Califorñios, like the Murrietas, seek a life free from Spanish rule, and they are a group comprised of ethnically Spanish Mexicans and culturally Spanish Mestizos, more of the former than the latter. The earliest arrivals also include some pure Indians whose family members have intermarried with the Spaniards.
        The Califorñio culture develops separately from Mexican culture and establishes itself during a hundred years of living in grace, being far enough from the seats of power in Spain and Mexico to ensure the benign neglect in which that culture prospers.
        By the 1840s, the Califorñios have established California as an autonomous region of Mexico and are moving toward independence, hounded by the external predation by foreign nations and an internal revolution by a mostly Anglo-American group that wants to establish California as an independent republic called the Bear Flag Republic, as Texas had earlier done.
        All those aspirations are crushed by the United States, when the 1848 Treaty of Guadalúpe Hidalgo ends what we call the Mexican War by moving forty percent of Mexico to the United States, at which time California experiences a sudden population shift, with Anglo-Americans streaming into the newly acquired territory and changing everything for the mostly Indian and Hispanic Californians. Later that same year, gold is discovered and Paradise is lost.
        The Mexicans native to California see this influx as a terrible immigration problem, as they themselves still are to the more than 300,000 California Indians, while our predecessors don’t consider themselves immigrants.
        Having just taken the place from Mexico, they see themselves as moving into their own house, entitled by Divine Providence and Manifest Destiny to possess this land and supplant the long-established cultures here.
        To that end, the federal government passes laws encouraging Anglo settlement and driving non-Anglos from the gold fields. In 1850, California statehood finalizes the acquisition.
        In 1851, the Spanish and Mexican land grants are broken, negating the pre-1848 land titles held almost entirely by Hispanics. This allows those properties to be divided into homesteads and claimed by Anglo settlers without payment to the owners; thereby disenfranchising the resident population, ensuring the demographic predominance needed to consolidate the gain, and completing our nation’s transcontinental expansion.
        That is the historical context for this true story of the transfiguration and death of Joaquín Murrieta, who comes here in 1849 to go into the wild horse business with his half-brother Joaquín Carrillo (Murrieta). The plan is to capture the horses in California and take them to Mexico, where the horses sell for half again as much as they do here.
        But bad things happen, including a rape and a murder. In taking revenge for those acts, Joaquín Murrieta becomes a known outlaw, with no possibility of turning back.
        The horse gangs (work crews) become raiding gangs, robbing the miners and sending the gold to Mexico with the monthly horse drives.
        Other Mexican miners, meeting with the same government-supported mistreatment experienced by Joaquín, also become outlaws, whose activities are then blamed on Joaquín. He becomes a symbol of what the Americans fear in California.
        The federal and state governments desperately want Anglo-Americans to move to California and settle the just-stolen state, and no one is going to move in until the bandits are moved out. If the authorities can kill Joaquín, the needed migration will occur.
        How this true story unfolds from there is to be found in the pages of Killing Joaquín, which is available through Xlibris or wherever else books are sold.

FORMAT: E-Book
OUR PRICE:
$9.99
By Peter Shaw

        Killing Joaquín begins in 1519 with the arrival in Mexico of Joaquín’s ancestor Juan Murrieta, who is part of the Spanish invasion force led by Hernan Cortez.
        The early part of the book relates the family’s background in Mexico and the social reality that motivates the northward migration of the Murrietas during three centuries of avoiding the Spanish boot their own family had once worn.
        The political structure in Colonial Mexico is as follows: Spaniards born in Spain, Spaniards born in Mexico, Mestizos, and Indians, in order of descending power. The people in Spain think of the Spaniards in Mexico as subordinate intermediaries necessary in the extraction of wealth from the colonized country.
        Time widens the gap, and the colonists become separate from the people who had originally sent them to Mexico as agents of subjugation and avenues of revenue.
        Their lowered status compounds the far greater duality that is soon caused by the genetic blending of Spanish and Indian people throughout Mexico, whereby the majority of the population becomes both the oppressor and the oppressed, which is a major component of the Mexican Dilemma.
        In 1776, there are fewer than one hundred non-Indian people in the entirety of California, and not all of them are Hispanic. The children born here to the largest of these settler groups are the first generation of the Califorñios – people born in California of Spanish-speaking parents.
        The Califorñios, like the Murrietas, seek a life free from Spanish rule, and they are a group comprised of ethnically Spanish Mexicans and culturally Spanish Mestizos, more of the former than the latter. The earliest arrivals also include some pure Indians whose family members have intermarried with the Spaniards.
        The Califorñio culture develops separately from Mexican culture and establishes itself during a hundred years of living in grace, being far enough from the seats of power in Spain and Mexico to ensure the benign neglect in which that culture prospers.
        By the 1840s, the Califorñios have established California as an autonomous region of Mexico and are moving toward independence, hounded by the external predation by foreign nations and an internal revolution by a mostly Anglo-American group that wants to establish California as an independent republic called the Bear Flag Republic, as Texas had earlier done.
        All those aspirations are crushed by the United States, when the 1848 Treaty of Guadalúpe Hidalgo ends what we call the Mexican War by moving forty percent of Mexico to the United States, at which time California experiences a sudden population shift, with Anglo-Americans streaming into the newly acquired territory and changing everything for the mostly Indian and Hispanic Californians. Later that same year, gold is discovered and Paradise is lost.
        The Mexicans native to California see this influx as a terrible immigration problem, as they themselves still are to the more than 300,000 California Indians, while our predecessors don’t consider themselves immigrants.
        Having just taken the place from Mexico, they see themselves as moving into their own house, entitled by Divine Providence and Manifest Destiny to possess this land and supplant the long-established cultures here.
        To that end, the federal government passes laws encouraging Anglo settlement and driving non-Anglos from the gold fields. In 1850, California statehood finalizes the acquisition.
        In 1851, the Spanish and Mexican land grants are broken, negating the pre-1848 land titles held almost entirely by Hispanics. This allows those properties to be divided into homesteads and claimed by Anglo settlers without payment to the owners; thereby disenfranchising the resident population, ensuring the demographic predominance needed to consolidate the gain, and completing our nation’s transcontinental expansion.
        That is the historical context for this true story of the transfiguration and death of Joaquín Murrieta, who comes here in 1849 to go into the wild horse business with his half-brother Joaquín Carrillo (Murrieta). The plan is to capture the horses in California and take them to Mexico, where the horses sell for half again as much as they do here.
        But bad things happen, including a rape and a murder. In taking revenge for those acts, Joaquín Murrieta becomes a known outlaw, with no possibility of turning back.
        The horse gangs (work crews) become raiding gangs, robbing the miners and sending the gold to Mexico with the monthly horse drives.
        Other Mexican miners, meeting with the same government-supported mistreatment experienced by Joaquín, also become outlaws, whose activities are then blamed on Joaquín. He becomes a symbol of what the Americans fear in California.
        The federal and state governments desperately want Anglo-Americans to move to California and settle the just-stolen state, and no one is going to move in until the bandits are moved out. If the authorities can kill Joaquín, the needed migration will occur.
        How this true story unfolds from there is to be found in the pages of Killing Joaquín, which is available through Xlibris or wherever else books are sold.

FORMAT: Softcover
OUR PRICE:
$15.99
By Anita Andreini Ahearn

Over a hundred years ago, Bernardo Andreini immigrated to America, recruited by a copper mining company in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

Bernardo’s first wife died when their second child was only five days old. In a few months, Filede Consani traveled from Italy to marry him. They were virtual strangers. Set in the beautiful Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan is the story of my grandparents, Bernardo and Filede, and their descendents.

A gigantic mining industry was in full swing, but it was not the region’s first. Thousands of years before, for 1200 continuous years, unremembered others had worked the mines.


FORMAT: Softcover
OUR PRICE:
$20.99
$17.84
By Anita Andreini Ahearn

Over a hundred years ago, Bernardo Andreini immigrated to America, recruited by a copper mining company in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

Bernardo’s first wife died when their second child was only five days old. In a few months, Filede Consani traveled from Italy to marry him. They were virtual strangers. Set in the beautiful Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan is the story of my grandparents, Bernardo and Filede, and their descendents.

A gigantic mining industry was in full swing, but it was not the region’s first. Thousands of years before, for 1200 continuous years, unremembered others had worked the mines.


FORMAT: Hardcover
OUR PRICE:
$30.99
$27.89
By Marian Britton
ALTA CALIFORNIAL A N D O F F I R E

HISTORICAL INCIDENTS; WARS, ANCIENT INDIAN TRADITIONS, CREATION LEGENDS, ABALONE SHELL ART, CENTRAL AND NORTHERN CALIFORNIA INDIAN NATIONS - THE MIWOK, YOKUTS, WINTUN, YUKI AND SOUTHWESTERN POMO TRIBES BETWEEN 1775 AND 1858.

SPANISH LANDGRANTS, CATHOLIC MISSIONS, INDIAN CONFLICTS, PEACE TREATIES. INTERACTION BETWEEN INDIAN TRIBES, MEXICAN AND AMERICAN SETTLERS. THE MILITARY. AS TOLD BY THOSE WHO WERE THERE.

INTERWEAVING THROUGHOUT - TWO FAMOUS MEN; MARIANO GUADALUPE VALLEJO, COMMANDANTE GENERAL de la ALTA CALIFORNIA AND THE SUISUN INDIAN WAR-CHIEF SEMYETO, “SOLANO”, “THE FIERCE ONE WITH THE BRAVE HANDS”. THESE TWO MEN OF VASTLY DIFFERENT THEM DECIDING THE DESTINY OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA INDIAN TRIBES.


FORMAT: Softcover
OUR PRICE:
$22.99
$19.54
By Marian Britton
ALTA CALIFORNIAL A N D O F F I R E

HISTORICAL INCIDENTS; WARS, ANCIENT INDIAN TRADITIONS, CREATION LEGENDS, ABALONE SHELL ART, CENTRAL AND NORTHERN CALIFORNIA INDIAN NATIONS - THE MIWOK, YOKUTS, WINTUN, YUKI AND SOUTHWESTERN POMO TRIBES BETWEEN 1775 AND 1858.

SPANISH LANDGRANTS, CATHOLIC MISSIONS, INDIAN CONFLICTS, PEACE TREATIES. INTERACTION BETWEEN INDIAN TRIBES, MEXICAN AND AMERICAN SETTLERS. THE MILITARY. AS TOLD BY THOSE WHO WERE THERE.

INTERWEAVING THROUGHOUT - TWO FAMOUS MEN; MARIANO GUADALUPE VALLEJO, COMMANDANTE GENERAL de la ALTA CALIFORNIA AND THE SUISUN INDIAN WAR-CHIEF SEMYETO, “SOLANO”, “THE FIERCE ONE WITH THE BRAVE HANDS”. THESE TWO MEN OF VASTLY DIFFERENT THEM DECIDING THE DESTINY OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA INDIAN TRIBES.


FORMAT: Hardcover
OUR PRICE:
$32.99
$29.69
  12   [NEXT > >] Displaying 1 to 15 of 16