The Yamasee Indians

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The Yamasee Indians

From Florida to South Carolina

Edited and with an introduction by Denise I. Bossy
Foreword by Alan Gallay

372 pages
5 photographs, 3 illustrations, 15 maps, 9 tables, index

Hardcover

November 2018

978-1-4962-0760-9

$75.00 Add to Cart
Paperback

April 2022

978-1-4962-3038-6

$35.00 Add to Cart
eBook (EPUB)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

November 2018

978-1-4962-1227-6

$35.00 Add to Cart
eBook (PDF)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

November 2018

978-1-4962-1229-0

$35.00 Add to Cart

About the Book

2019 William L. Proctor Award from the Historic St. Augustine Research Institute

The Yamasee Indians are best known for their involvement in the Indian slave trade and the eighteenth-century war (1715–54) that took their name. Yet, their significance in colonial history is far larger than that. Denise I. Bossy brings together archaeologists of South Carolina and Florida with historians of the Native South, Spanish Florida, and British Carolina for the first time to answer elusive questions about the Yamasees’ identity, history, and fate.

Until now scholarly works have rarely focused on the Yamasees themselves. In southern history, the Yamasees appear only sporadically outside of slave raiding or the Yamasee War. Their culture and political structures, the complexities of their many migrations, their kinship networks, and their survival remain largely uninvestigated. The Yamasees’ relative obscurity in scholarship is partly a result of their geographic mobility. Reconstructing their past has posed a real challenge in light of their many, often overlapping, migrations. In addition, the campaigns waged by the British (and the Americans after them) in order to erase the Yamasees from the South forced Yamasee survivors to camouflage bit by bit their identities.

The Yamasee Indians recovers the complex history of these peoples. In this critically important new volume, historians and archaeologists weave together the fractured narratives of the Yamasees through probing questions about their mobility, identity, and networks.



 

Author Bio

Denise I. Bossy is an associate professor of history at the University of North Florida, Jacksonville.

Alan Gallay is the Lyndon B. Johnson Chair of U.S. History at Texas Christian University. He has authored and edited many books, including Voices of the Old South: Eyewitness Accounts, 1528–1861; The Indian Slave Trade: The Rise of the English Empire in the American South, 1670–1717; and Indian Slavery in Colonial America (Nebraska, 2010).

Praise

"The Yamasee Indians is a welcome addition to scholarship on southeastern Indigenous peoples. It will also be useful for scholars who focus on other regions and time periods. . . . In including analysis of Yamasee individuals, families, and towns, the volume irrefutably proves that Yamasees’ experiences before, during, and after the Yamasee War were far from monolithic."—Garrett Wright, Native American and Indigenous Studies

"With deep readings of archaeological and historical traces, these essays fit exceptionally well together to lend a comprehensive view of Yamasee history and culture in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries."—Jonathan Hancock, Florida Historical Quarterly

"The volume is one that experts on Native American and early American history, graduate and undergraduate students, and nonspecialists should find useful, engaging, and interesting."—D. Andrew Johnson, Journal of Southern History

“This impressive anthology tells the remarkable story of the Yamasee Indians, and in the telling, reveals the opportunities, upheavals, and strategies for survival of Native communities living on the edge of an expanding European empire.”—Robbie Ethridge, professor of anthropology at the University of Mississippi and author of From Chicaza to Chickasaw: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Mississippian World, 1540–1715
 

“A much-needed, remarkably thorough, and impressively interdisciplinary investigation of a critically important but all-too-often-misunderstood Native nation. Anyone with an interest in the early American South and its people should read this book.”—Joshua Piker, editor of the William and Mary Quarterly, Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, and professor of history at the College of William & Mary

“This anthology makes a fine addition to the extant scholarship on the Yamasee people, offers a balanced juxtaposition of disciplinary and thematic approaches to the subject, and builds on the scholarship that has come before while casting an eye toward what might be some promising areas for future study. The chapters all interconnect in ways that bespeak a kind of collective and collaborative approach to the topic at hand.”—James Taylor Carson, professor and head of the School of Humanities, Languages, and Social Science at Griffith University in Brisbane and author of  Thee Columbian Covenant: Race and the Writing of American History

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations    
List of Tables    
Foreword, by Alan Gallay    
Acknowledgments    
Introduction: Recovering Yamasee History    
Denise I. Bossy
Part 1. Yamasee Identity
1. Living at Liberty: The Ungovernable Yamasees of Spanish Florida    
Amy Turner Bushnell
2. Yamasee Migrations into the Mocama and Timucua Provinces of Florida, 1667–1683: An Archaeological Perspective    
Keith Ashley
3. Yamasee Material Culture and Identity: Altamaha/San Marcos Ceramics in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Yamasee Indian Settlements, Georgia and South Carolina    
Eric C. Poplin and Jon Bernard Marcoux
4. Cultural Continuity and Change: Archaeological Research at Yamasee Primary Towns in South Carolina    
Alexander Y. Sweeney
Part 2. Yamasee Networks
5. Spiritual Diplomacy: Reinterpreting the Yamasee Prince’s Eighteenth-Century Voyage to England    
Denise I. Bossy
6. Yamasee-African Ties in Carolina and Florida    
Jane Landers
7. The Long Yamasee War: Reflections on Yamasee Conflict in the Eighteenth Century    
Steven C. Hahn
Part 3. Surviving the Yamasee War
8. The Persistence of Yamasee Power and Identity at the Town of San Antonio de Pocotalaca, 1716–1752    
Amanda Hall
9. Refuge among the Spanish: Yamasee Community Coalescence in St. Augustine after 1715    
Andrea P. White
10. Chief Francisco Jospogue: Reconstructing the Paths of a Guale-Yamasee Indian Lineage through Spanish Records    
Susan Richbourg Parker
11. The Yamasee in West Florida    
John E. Worth
List of Contributors    
Index    

Awards

Winner of the William L. Proctor Award from the Historic St. Augustine Research Institute

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