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A Century of Dishonor

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Helen Hunt Jackson was an American writer who most widely became famous as an activist to improve United States government treatment of Native Americans. In 1879 her interests turned to the Native Americans after hearing a lecture in Boston by Standing Bear, the Ponca Chief. He described the forceful removal of the Ponca from their reservation in Nebraska. Moved by the issues presented by Standing Bear, Hunt learned about the government defaulting on treaties, the removal of Indians to reservations, and the Indian Wars. Soon after Standing Bear's speech, she became an activist, investigating and publicizing government misconduct, circulating petitions, raising money, and writing letters to "The New York Times" on behalf of the Ponca. She gained the widest exposure with her novel, "Ramona", dramatizing the ill treatment by the U.S. government of Native Americans in Southern California. "A Century of Dishonor", published in 1881, was a direct response to the adverse effect of government actions towards the Native Americans. A copy was sent to each member of the U.S. Congress. This edition is printed on premium acid-free paper.

ISBN-13: 9781420978674

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: Digireads.com

Publication Date: 11-30-2021

Pages: 334

Product Dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.75(d)

Helen Hunt Jackson (1830-1885) was an American poet and activist. Born Helen Maria Fiske in Amherst, Massachusetts, she was raised in a unitarian family alongside a sister, Anne. By seventeen years of age, she had lost both of her parents and was taken in by an uncle. Educated at Ipswich Female Seminar and the Abbott Institute, she was a classmate and friend of Emily Dickinson. At 22, she married Captain Edward Bissell Hunt, with whom she had two sons. Following the deaths of her children and husband, Hunt Jackson dedicated herself to poetry and moved to Newport in 1866. “Coronation” appeared in The Atlantic in 1869, launching Hunt Jackson’s career and helping her find publication in The Century, The Nation, and Independent. Following several years in Europe, she visited California and developed a fascination with the American West. After contracting tuberculosis, she stayed at Seven Falls, a treatment center in Colorado Springs, where she met her second husband William Sharpless Jackson. Praised early on for her elegiac verses by such figures as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Hunt Jackson turned her attention to the plight of Native Americans in 1879 following a lecture in Boston by Ponca chief Standing Bear. She began to lobby government officials by mail and in person, launching and publishing her own investigations of systemic abuse in the New York Independent, Century Magazine, and the Daily Tribune. In 1881, she published A Century of Dishonor, a history of seven tribes who faced oppression, displacement, and genocide under American expansion. She sent her book to every member of Congress and continued to work as an activist and writer until her death from stomach cancer. Ramona (1884), a political novel, was described upon publication in the North American Review as “unquestionably the best novel yet produced by an American woman.”

Table of Contents

Preface V
Introduction 1
Chapter I. Introductory 9
Chapter II. The Delawares 32
Chapter III. The Cheyennes 66
Chapter IV. The Nez Perces 103
Chapter V. The Sioux 136
Chapter VI. The Poncas 186
Chapter VII. The Winnebagoes 218
Chapter VIII. The Cherokees 257
Chapter IX. Massacres of Indians by Whites 298
I. The Conestoga Massacre 298
II. The Gnadenhutten Massacre 317
III. Massacres of Apaches 324
Chapter X. Conclusion 336
Appendix
I. The Sand Creek Massacre 343
II. The Ponca Case 359
III. Testimonies to Indian Character 374
IV. Outrages Committed on Indians by Whites 381
V. Extracts from the Report of the Commission sent to treat with the Sioux Chief Sitting Bull, in Canada 386
VI. Account of some of the old Grievances of the Sioux 389
VII. Letter from Sarah Winnemucca, an Educated Pah-Ute Woman 395
VIII. Laws of the Delaware Nation of Indians 396
IX. Account of the Cherokee who Invented the Cherokee Alphabet 404
X. Prices paid by White Men for Scalps 405
XI. Extract from Treaty with Cheyennes in 1865 406
XII. Wood-cutting by Indians in Dakota 407
XIII. Sequel to the Walla Walla Massacre 407
XIV. An Account of the Numbers, Location, and Social and Industrial Condition of each Important Tribe and Band of Indians within the United States 411
XV. Report on the Condition and Needs of the Mission Indians of California 458