Born to Anglo-American parents on the Appalachian frontier, captured by the Miami Indians at the age of thirteen, and adopted into the tribe, William Wells (1770–1812) moved between two cultures all his life but was comfortable in neither. Vilified by some historians for his divided loyalties, he remains relatively unknown even though he is worthy of comparison with such famous frontiersmen as Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett. William Heath’s thoroughly researched book is the first biography of this man-in-the-middle. A servant of empire with deep sympathies for the people his country sought to dispossess, Wells married Chief Little Turtle’s daughter and distinguished himself as a Miami warrior, as an American spy, and as an Indian agent whose multilingual skills made him a valuable interpreter. Heath examines pioneer life in the Ohio Valley from both white and Indian perspectives, yielding rich insights into Wells’s career as well as broader events on the post-revolutionary American frontier, where Anglo-Americans pushing westward competed with the Indian nations of the Old Northwest for control of territory. Wells’s unusual career, Heath emphasizes, earned him a great deal of ill will. Because he warned the U.S. government against Tecumseh’s confederacy and the Tenskwatawa’s “religiously mad” followers, he was hated by those who supported the Shawnee leaders. Because he came to question treaties he had helped bring about, and cautioned the Indians about their harmful effects, he was distrusted by Americans. Wells is a complicated hero, and his conflicted position reflects the decline of coexistence and cooperation between two cultures.
A screenplay about an American pioneer, William Wells, who was kidnapped and adopted by the Miami Indians and fought in the frontier Indian Wars through the War of 1812.
Daniel S. Butrick, May 19, 1838–April 2, 1839: Cherokee Removal, Monograph One (Park Hill: Oklahoma Chapter, Trail of Tears Association, 1998), 54; Malone, Cherokees of the Old South, 237. 110. Crying Wolf was a resident at New Echota.
Both Delaware and Shawnee had long traditions of cultural mediators, as James H. Merrell discussed in Into the American Woods. In this changing Indigenous world of the eighteenth century, William Wells paved the way for many of the ...
Nelson, Larry L. A Man of Distinction Among Them. Kent State University Press, 1999. — — — . “Never Have They Done So Little: ... Benjamin Hawkins, Indian Agent. University of Georgia Press, 2009. A Precise Journal of General Wayne's ...
Tecumseh and the Prophet presents the untold story of the Shawnee brothers who retaliated against this threat--the two most significant siblings in Native American history, who, Cozzens helps us understand, should be writ large in the ...
Some were even tourists. ... Based on primary accounts, Calloway's book illuminates in words and pictures what Native visitors to these cities both saw and how they were seen ..."--Inside jacket flap
Finkelman, “The Northwest Ordinance,” in Pathways to the Old Northwest, 15. 223. Nyle H. Miller, “An English Runnymede in Kansas,” Kansas Historical Quarterly 42, no. 1 (Spring 1975), 22–24. 224. Malcolm J. Rohrbough, The Trans- ...
John William Nelson charts the many peoples that traversed and sought power along Chicago's portage paths from the seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries, including Indigenous Illinois traders, French explorers, Jesuit missionaries, ...
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.
Frederick E. Hoxie, Ronald Hoffman, and Peter J. Albert (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1999), 201. ... Lawrence Kinnaird, “International Rivalry in the Creek Country: Part I. The Ascendency of Alexander McGillivray, ...