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"A Paradise of Blood" Topic


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Tango0126 Jan 2016 4:31 p.m. PST

"In 1811, a portion of the Creek Indians who inhabited a vast area across Georgia, Alabama, and parts of Florida and Mississippi, interpreted an earth tremor as a sign that they had to return to their traditional way of life. What was an internal Indian dispute soon became engulfed in the greater War of 1812 to become perhaps the most consequential campaign of that conflict. At immediate stake in what became known as the Creek War of 1813–14 was whether the Creeks and their inconstant
British and Spanish allies or the young United States would control millions of acres of highly fertile Native American land. The conflict's larger issue was whether the Indian nations of the lower American South—the Creek, Cherokee, Choctaw, and Chickasaw—would be able to remain in their ancestral homes.

Beginning with conquistador Ferdinand DeSoto's fateful encounter with Indians of the southeast in the 1500s, A Paradise of Blood: The Creek War of 1813–14 by Howard T. Weir, III, narrates the complete story of the cultural clash and centuries-long struggle for this landscape of stunning beauty. Using contemporary letters, military reports, and other primary sources, the author places the Creek War in the context of Tecumseh's fight for Native American independence and the ongoing war between the United States and European powers for control of North America. The Creek War was savage, with atrocities such as the murder of hundreds of settlers at Fort Mims, Alabama, the greatest massacre of its kind in United States history, as well as fierce battles, including Horseshoe Bend, where more Indian warriors were confirmed
killed than in any other single engagement in Indian War history. Many notable personalities fought during the war, including Andrew Jackson Chief William Weatherford, and Davy Crockett. When the war was over, more than twenty million acres had been added to the United States, thousands of Indians were dead or homeless, and Jackson was on his American History way to the presidency. The war also eliminated the last effective Native American resistance to westward expansion east of the Mississippi, and by giving the United States land that was ideal for large-scale cotton planting, it laid the foundation for the Civil War a generation later. A Paradise of Blood is a comprehensive and masterful history of one of America's most important and influential Indian Wars."

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Amicalement
Armand

Jcfrog27 Jan 2016 8:27 a.m. PST

Will get. Merci

Tango0127 Jan 2016 10:35 a.m. PST

A votre service mon ami!. (smile)

Amicalement
Armand

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