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Vol 1 905p Vol 2 961p.
A business, professional and social record of men and women of schievement in the central states.
"The whites have driven us from the great salt water, forced us over the mountains.The way, the only way, to check and stop this evil is for all red men to unite in claiming a common equal right in the land." -Tecumseh, quoted in Tecumseh: Vision of GloryThe legendary charismatic Indian chief Tecumseh was born nearly a decade before Columbus' discovery of the New World. He came of age in an era of violence and cultural decay in which Indian tribes across the American continent expended their energy attempting to oust invading Europeans who were confiscating their land. When white settlers were pushing beyond into Indian territories as the state of Ohio joined the Union in 1803, angry Native ...
Part 1, Books, Group 1, v. 24 : Nos. 1-148 (March, 1927 - March, 1928)
From the author of more than thirty other titles comes his first mystery fiction that is all set to absorb readers. This time W.C. Madden will take them on an exciting journey through time to witness mysteriously compelling events in Tecumsehs Curse. This story unfolds in the modern day of Battle Ground, a small town where the Battle of Tippecanoe took place two hundred years before. Through the pages of this riveting book, readers will be sent back to the Battle of Fallen Timbers in the Ohio Territory in 1793, the place where William Henry Harrison has his first encounter with the famous Shawnee Indian chief, Tecumseh. What the modern day mystery has to do with the history is something readers would find out later as the surprising end unveils in Tecumsehs Curse. Skillfully written, packed with mystery and thrill, Tecumsehs Curse is an engrossing read everyone will surely find interesting and memorable.
South Bend, Indiana stood at the crossroads of several major Native American trading routes long before the Europeans, led by the French, arrived from Canada and the East Coast to trade for furs. The city on a bend of the St. Joseph River soon became an important commercial center for settlers moving west. Eventually, the University of Notre Dame and Studebaker would call the growing community home.
Attributed to Tecumseh in the early 1800s, this statement is frequently cited to uphold the view, long and widely proclaimed in scholarly and popular literature, that Mother Earth is an ancient and central Native American Figure. In this radical and comprehensive rethinking, Sam D. Gill traces the evolution of female earth imagery in North America from the sixteenth century to the present and reveals how the evolution of the current Mother Earth figure was influenced by prevailing European-American imagery of Americaand the Indians as well as by the rapidly changing Indian identity.