Journals Log In | Journals Account Info

Books Cart  
Journals Cart  
 
 
SEARCH
  
Browse Books

Valentine's Day Sale
Black History Month Sale
National Parks Sale
Browse Bargain Books


New February Books
Browse Bestsellers
UNP on Facebook

View Our New Seasonal Catalog (pdf)
Restoring the Chain of Friendship, Restoring the Chain of Friendship, 0803248172, 0-8032-4817-2, 978-0-8032-4817-5, 9780803248175, Timothy D. Willig , , Restoring the Chain of Friendship, 0803222033, 0-8032-2203-3, 978-0-8032-2203-8, 9780803222038, Timothy D. Willig

Restoring the Chain of Friendship
British Policy and the Indians of the Great Lakes, 1783-1815
Timothy D. Willig

hardcover
2008. 390 pp.
10 photographs, 2 maps, index
978-0-8032-4817-5
$50.00 s
 

During the American Revolution the British enjoyed a unified alliance with their Native allies in the Great Lakes region of North America. By the War of 1812, however, that “chain of friendship” had devolved into smaller, more local alliances. To understand how and why this pivotal shift occurred, Restoring the Chain of Friendship examines British and Native relations in the Great Lakes region between the end of the American Revolution and the end of the War of 1812.
 
Timothy D. Willig traces the developments in British-Native interaction and diplomacy in three regions: those served by the agencies of Fort St. Joseph, Fort Amherstburg, and Fort George. During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the Native peoples in each area developed unique relationships with the British. Relations in these regions were affected by such factors as the local success of the fur trade, Native relations with the United States, geography, the influence of British-Indian agents, intertribal relations, Native acculturation or cultural revitalization, and constitutional issues of Native sovereignty and legal statuses. Assessing the wide variety of factors that influenced relations in each of these areas, Willig determines that it was nearly impossible for Britain to establish a single Indian policy for its North American borderlands, and it was thus forced to adapt to conditions and circumstances particular to each region.

Timothy D. Willig is an assistant professor of history and coordinator of the Native American Studies Program at Onondaga Community College in Syracuse, New York.

"Restoring the Chain of Friendship does an admirable job of exploring the complications of British policy, and it does an even greater service for the field by explaining how native opinions and actions contributed to those complications."—John P. Bowes, Journal of American History


Also of Interest

Indian Treaty-Making Policy in the United States a
Jill St. Germain


Army and Empire
Michael N. McConnell


Country Between
Michael N. McConnell


Blue Jacket
John Sugden