Research Catalog

The Caddos, the Wichitas, and the United States, 1846-1901 / F. Todd Smith.

Title
The Caddos, the Wichitas, and the United States, 1846-1901 / F. Todd Smith.
Author
Smith, F. Todd (Foster Todd), 1957-
Publication
College Station : Texas A&M University Press, c1996.

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TextUse in library N.A.ETH. Sm 57 cOff-site

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Details

Description
xvii, 190 p. : ill., maps; 24 cm.
Summary
  • F. Todd Smith's new narrative picks up the story of these tribes begun in his volume The Caddo Indians: Tribes at the Convergence of Empires, 1542-1854. Their relations with the United States government, the state of Texas (whose role in Indian policy was distinctive because of its previous status as a sovereign nation), and officials of Indian Territory, as well as their ongoing struggles with other tribes similarly being forced from traditional lands, make compelling reading. Smith documents the process by which the Caddos and Wichitas increasingly lost control of their own fate and came to be governed by the whim of the federal government.
  • Smith relates the political history of the two tribes, details life and agricultural work on the reservation, chronicles federal attempts to introduce an education system to the Indians, and traces the effect of hostile tribes and unscrupulous whites on the reservation experiment. Using primary documents, he traces the history of the Wichitas and Caddos through the Civil War, when they were forced to take refuge in Union-controlled Kansas, to the sharing of reservation land with their former enemies, the Kiowas and Comanches. He describes in detail the efforts of the two tribes to adapt to white ways, developing a life within the confines of the reservation experience that borrowed from Euro-American culture while retaining many of their own traditions.
  • Throughout the book, Smith convincingly analyzes how the successful adaptation of the tribes to white demands itself undermined their power and future. In the end, Smith shows, the Caddos and Wichitas used the Euro-American legal system to fight the last battle - unsuccessfully - losing the very basis of tribal life, shared land.
Series Statement
The centennial series of the Association of Former Students, Texas A&M University ; no. 64
Uniform Title
The centennial series of the Association of Former Students, Texas A&M University ; no. 64.
Subject
  • Caddo Indians > Ethnic identity
  • Caddo Indians > Government relations
  • Caddo Indians > History > 19th century
  • Indian reservations > United States > History > 19th century
  • United States > Race relations
  • Wichita Indians > Ethnic identity
  • Wichita Indians > Government relations
  • Wichita Indians > History > 19th century
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. [179]-184) and index.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
Ch. 1. Through the Treaty of Council Springs -- Ch. 2. Searching for a Home, 1846-53 -- Ch. 3. The Brazos Reserve, 1854-59 -- Ch. 4. The Civil War Era, 1859-67 -- Ch. 5. Reestablishment of the Wichita Agency, 1868-78 -- Ch. 6. Life on the Wichita Reservation, 1879-1901 -- Ch. 7. Dissolution of the Wichita Reservation.
ISBN
0890967083 (alk. paper)
LCCN
^^^96026186^
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library