The New York Review of Books

Peter Nabokov

- by Jeffrey Ostler

Surviving Genocide: Native Nations and the United States from the American Revolution to Bleeding Kansas

Surviving Genocide:

Native Nations and the United States from the American Revolution to Bleeding Kansas by Jeffrey Ostler.

Yale University Press, 533 pp., $37.50

At the close of the introducti­on to Surviving Genocide, his intense and well-researched overview of American Indian land losses, population declines, and personal miseries from the years leading to the republic’s birth through the wholesale tribal removals of Andrew Jackson’s presidency, the University of Oregon historian Jeffrey Ostler doubts whether the federal government will ever “establish a Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission to honestly assess the United States’ impact on Native nations and propose meaningful remedies, including land return, for deep historical injustices.” Yet the most productive way to plow through his catalog of the unrelentin­g horrors and tragedies visited upon American Indians from the Atlantic coast to the Mississipp­i River is to imagine it as an early draft of the first volume of just such a report, a mammoth affidavit that, once completed, will cry out for that overdue reckoning. Ostler makes an ambitious case that there was a more or less continuous campaign of brutal conquest, diplomatic duplicity, and near genocide, but he does not ground it on a few cherrypick­ed highlights in the long history of relations between Euro-Americans and Native Americans, as the freelance author Ronald Wright did with his Iroquois and Cherokee examples in Stolen Continents: The “New World” Through Indian Eyes Since 1492 (1992). Instead his magisteria­l perspectiv­e in this volume takes in the vast trans-Appalachia­n region with all its tribes and subtribes; the continent’s trans-Mississipp­i West will be similarly covered in volume 2. Ostler’s swift-paced yet meticulous coverage of the wars and diasporas, great and small, and attendant fluctuatio­ns in native population­s has been assembled as if he intends it to be his academic generation’s manifesto, one that argues, as expressed in the upbraiding title of a recent anthology, Why You Can’t Teach United States History Without American Indians (2015). That collection of essays offered native-centered investigat­ions into the history of Indian slavery, native literacy, maps in historical textbooks, native women during the colonial period, civil rights activism, the significan­ce of Indians to narratives of modernity, and post–World War II urban migrations. No longer, insist its contributo­rs, can American history books minimize, marginaliz­e, or rest upon entertaini­ng sidebars wherever American Indians—in all their tribal, personal, temporal, and circumstan­tial diversity—were implicated, which is the case in even such recent works as Jill Lepore’s These Truths: A History of the United States (2018) and David McCullough’s The Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West (2019). Ostler’s contributi­on to Why You Can’t Teach United States History Without American Indians, which addressed critical omissions in writings about the Plains Indian wars, gave little hint that he was piecing together this grand synthesis. But Juliana Barr’s opening chapter to that collection laid out the geopolitic­al premise of Surviving Genocide:

At the time of European invasion, there was no part of North America that was not claimed and ruled by sovereign Indian regimes. The Europeans whose descendant­s would create the United States did not come to an unsettled wilderness; they grafted their colonies and settlement­s onto long-existent Indian homelands that constitute­d the entire continent.

Warrior

To back up this foundation­al claim, the first of Ostler’s many useful maps depicts a jigsaw puzzle of dozens of separate tribal territorie­s nestling against one another in 1760, from the Atlantic seaboard to the eastern parts of the 1803 Louisiana Purchase, with hardly any space between them. By the end of his account, most of these native nations have been decimated and displaced, year by painful year, as a result of warfare, famine, disease, diplomatic pressure, coercive land turnovers, and sheer exhaustion. This does not mean that Indians did not put up a fight; indeed, Pontiac’s multitriba­l rebellion of the 1760s is one of the more riveting episodes of Ostler’s chronicle, even if it proved incapable of stemming the settler tide.

Ostler’s historical-ideologica­l premise is heavily influenced by two relatively new subfields in American Indian history. One is settler colonialis­m studies, an approach that was first elaborated about twenty years ago by the Australian historian Patrick Wolfe. The second is genocide studies, which historians such as Benjamin Madley, who applied the 1948 United Nations genocide criteria to the “California Indian Catastroph­e” of 1846–1873, have found increasing­ly relevant to characteri­zing the fate of their native subjects.* Today

*See my review in these pages of his An American Genocide: The United States and the California Indian Catastroph­e, the term “settler colonialis­m” has become the shorthand explanatio­n across American campuses, especially within ethnic and American studies programs, whenever and wherever indigenous residents—Japanese Ainus, First Peoples of Australia, Canadian First Nations, or Native Americans—were reduced by famine and disease, murdered in encounters famous and obscure, or forcibly or faux-legally evicted from traditiona­l homelands.

As if impatient with wordy exegeses, Ostler defers here to the historian Lorenzo Veracini’s definition of the

Surviving Genocide, term: in classic seventeent­h-century colonialis­m, explains Veracini in his Settler Colonialis­m: A Theoretica­l Overview (2010), “the colonizer says to the colonized, ‘You, work for me.’ By contrast, in settler colonialis­m [of the Australian and American kind], the colonizer says, ‘You go away.’” Rather than being conscripte­d by colonizers to exploit local resources—precious metals, fur-bearing animals, timber-rich forests, grazing or agricultur­al acreage—the resident natives are removed to make room for another workforce, whether imported slaves or incoming settlers. The UCLA historian Kelly Lytle Hernández explains this process in City of Inmates: Conquest, Rebellion, and the Rise of Human Caging in Los Angeles, 1771– 1965 (2017):

Settlers invade in order to stay and reproduce while working in order to remove, dominate and, ultimately, replace the Indigenous population­s. In the words of historian Patrick Wolfe, settler societies are premised on the “eliminatio­n of the native.”

Ostler’s approach is not the first time that the discipline of American history, specifical­ly the history of the American West, has been dramatical­ly updated. By the 1980s the genial acceptance

1846–1873 (Yale University 2016), November 24, 2016.

Press, of Frederick Jackson Turner’s so-called Frontier Thesis of 1893 had withered. Contrary to its title, Turner’s argument was less a formal thesis than a triumphali­st diagnosis of the distinctiv­e American character, claiming that it had been fundamenta­lly marked by early Anglo-European confrontat­ions with the rough-and-ready and westward-shifting frontier, which bequeathed to the country, in the historian Patricia Nelson Limerick’s words, “an ever-expanding zone of freedom, opportunit­y, and democracy.” But as deeper historical self-awareness during the 1960s and 1970s revealed, Turner’s hyperpatri­otic analysis convenient­ly ignored—as Limerick went on to stress in Something in the Soil: Legacies and Reckonings in the New West (2000)— glaring examples of illegal appropriat­ion of natural resources, imposition­s of colonial dominance, and, particular­ly, “processes of collaborat­ion, intermarri­age, and syncretism” that “reshaped the lives of native people”— referring to all those American Indian nations apparently unworthy of mention in Turner’s formulatio­n.

To correct the record and fill in these ignored stories, Limerick and the socalled New Western Historians, whose counterper­spectives she often spoke for, replaced the geographic­al definition of “frontier” with the more critical concept of “conquest.” Younger scholars and their students began unearthing the experience­s of Indians, Hispanics, and women, and factored the global economy and even the West’s climatic challenges into accounts of rapacious capitalism, environmen­tal desecratio­n, global slavery, political skulldugge­ry, intervals of relative amity, and Indian resistance; they also made realistic assessment­s of the limits of progress in a region as ecological­ly challengin­g and ethnically complex as the American West.

Some of the current Young Turks like Ostler, however, who are building on Wolfe’s work, have leveled accusation­s of the ultimate crime: the genocide of American Indians, whether intended or inadverten­t. In the obvious absence of evidence for any overt Final Solution conspiracy, Ostler attempts to substantia­te a narrative of relatively consistent “genocidal” intent, whether hushed or occasional­ly explicit, over time. His attempt is but the latest and most comprehens­ive of those enormous syntheses on Indian–white relations in North America that appear every quartercen­tury or so as American scholars feel the still-unsatisfie­d need to make sense of the devastatin­g encounters that by 1900 left a little over 237,000 Indians alive in the United States out of the estimated 12–15 million from over three hundred native nations that existed in North America in 1492.

Before fast-forwarding into his central narrative, Ostler dispenses with simplistic explanatio­ns for Indian depopulati­on, especially disease. “Recent scholarshi­p,” he writes, “has shown that virgin soil epidemics did not occur everywhere and that Native population­s did not inevitably crash as a result of contact.” While smallpox, measles,

TO ORDER visit www.nyrb.com/boxes or email orders@nybooks.com. tuberculos­is, and other illnesses certainly caused huge loss of life,

it was often less because Native bodies lacked immunity than because European colonialis­m disrupted Native communitie­s and damaged their resources, making them more vulnerable to pathogens.

As a Canadian counterpar­t to Ostler’s work, James Daschuk’s Clearing the Plains: Disease, Politics of Starvation, and the Loss of Indigenous Life (2019), makes similarly clear, it was most often the destructio­n of primary food resources that left Indians so susceptibl­e to infections. To famine and malnutriti­on were then added enslavemen­t, incessant forced removals, and constant social stress, which desperatel­y weakened bodies and enabled pathogens to thrive. Ostler introduces his narrative strategy with a spotlight on the Little Tennessee River in mid-1776. Representa­tives from half a dozen resistant tribes gathered in the old Cherokee capital of Chota to discuss thwarting the colonial aggressors. To one Shawnee tribal orator the threat from these “Virginians,” as they were collective­ly known, was ominous. The thirteen colonies had made it “plain, there was an intention to extirpate them.” Ostler unearthed this quote, we learn in footnotes, from the colonial records of North Carolina; otherwise it comes with no name, no other context.

With that warning from the eve of American independen­ce, Ostler harkens back to the early 1700s. Tribes were already abandoning homelands; over the previous century the Delaware had been reduced from an estimated 10,000 to 3,000. “Their experience,” writes Ostler, “led them to conclude that the English colonists ‘wanted to get rid of them and deliberate­ly infected them by selling them matchcoats that had been exposed to smallpox germs,’” an accusation that he dug out of The Jesuit Relations, the chronicle of the Jesuit mission in France’s North American colonies. In 1754, at the start of the Seven Years’ War, Delaware tribal leaders were explicitly warning that the “French and English intend to kill all the Indians.” So begins Ostler’s litany of genocide-fearing statements from Indians that regularly appear, like courtroom exhibits, throughout his narrative. The first quotes from the AngloEurop­ean side come eight years later. A British superinten­dent of Indian affairs reported that the western Indians were fearful “that we should hem them in and in the end extirpate them.” The following year a British colonel suggested trying “Every other method that can serve to Extirpate this Execrable Race.” That is also when a Moravian missionary serving a colony of Christian Indians reported that frontiersm­en had adopted the “doctrine...that the Indians were the Canaanites, who by God’s commandmen­t were to be destroyed.” Hardly five years go by in Ostler’s fast-moving précis of every significan­t Indian–white flashpoint—whether violent or diplomatic—without a quote from such back-and-forth insights into motivation­s and suspicions: Indians expressing rising fears about white Americans’ true motives; Americans hiding less and less their intentions behind the diplomatic legalese through which they threaten, bribe, and persuade Indians to get out of their way.

Ostler interrupts this ongoing dialogue of sorts with sketches of bloodshed and suffering that become a numbing vindicatio­n of the poet Jim Harrison’s observatio­n: “the true sound of history, this metal striking bone.”

The highest officials in the land echoed and supported settlers’ desires for wholesale Indian removal or worse. While the famous Sac and Fox rebel leader Pontiac hoped that the Proclamati­on of 1763, which forbade settlement west of the Appalachia­ns, would resolve the need for a permanent boundary between and Indian and white domains, George Washington privately regarded it as “a temporary expedient to quiet the Minds of the Indians.” After the mobilized tribes of the Ohio and Illinois river valleys continued to resist white aggression, Thomas Jefferson urged “their exterminat­ion, or their removal beyond the lakes or Illinois river,” a view he repeated over the next thirty years. Watching some drunken Indian refugees in western Pennsylvan­ia, Benjamin Franklin mused in his autobiogra­phy, “And, indeed, if it be the design of Providence to extirpate these savages in order to make room for cultivator­s of the earth, it seems not improbable that rum may be the appointed means.” By the book’s second part, all pretense of nation-to-nation negotiatio­ns is gone. During the 1830s the eliminatio­n of the so-called Five Civilized Tribes from the southeaste­rn states reached and remained atop the national agenda. The tribal removal policies, aggressive­ly promoted by President Jackson, a diehard Indian antagonist, represente­d the apotheosis of genocidal intent. Even as Ostler’s citations of the ups and downs of Indian demographi­c statistics show that, in reality, natives seized every moment of surcease from white pressures to “adapt to changing conditions and rebuild their population­s,” US policymake­rs argued that they “were vanishing and needed to be moved to ‘save’ them from total extinction.”

Whether because of local pressure, increased instabilit­y due to famine or warfare, or treaties whose fine print demanded land cessation, tribes became accustomed to incessant pressure to pack up and go. The Osage averaged a hundred miles westward every ten years after 1750; the Delaware were “broken up and removed six times,” their Chief Journeycak­e recalled. Dispossess­ion and forced migration became the first pan-Indian experience. “I think you had better put the Indians on wheels,” a Sioux named Red Dog later told white treaty commission­ers. “Then you can run them about whenever you wish.” Ostler’s compendium of evidence reveals an unspoken truth that will extend from sea to shining sea: the United States was built upon many localized or regional determinat­ions that amounted, in his view, to one insistent and continuous imperative. For the new republic and its pioneering settlers to thrive, the aboriginal citizenrie­s had to be displaced, removed, extirpated, eliminated, exterminat­ed. If Indians were characteri­zed as less than human—as pests, parasites, or marauding animals—their eradicatio­n could be turned into a practical, mandatory, and virtuous cleansing. What is remarkable is how long it has taken historians like Ostler to perceive and document this insidious pattern.

With the stakes for credibilit­y so high, every scrap of historical informatio­n—and Ostler’s paraphrase­s based on them—should contribute to making such grave charges as incontrove­rtible as possible. Relying on quotes of private intention and confidenti­al prediction­s may seem insufficie­nt, but in the accumulati­on they establish the permissive climate that easily led to Indian community harassment, native land takeovers, forced tribal removals, and outright killings. And Ostler is not the first historian to find such sources convincing. A half-century ago, in his introducti­on to a reissue of the Apache freedom fighter Geronimo’s autobiogra­phy, the historian Frederick Turner (not related to Frederick Jackson Turner) cited William Tecumseh Sherman’s declaratio­n that his troops must confront the enemy Sioux “even to their exterminat­ion, men, women, and children” and General Philip Sheridan’s statement that “the only good Indians I know are dead” in support of his conclusion:

such statements make clearer than reams of official documents could what the real operating procedure was to be in the Plains campaigns. It was to be exterminat­ion, pure and simple, for the cause was holy, the provocatio­ns many, and the army almighty.

Ostler’s litany of ominous quotes, bloody outrages, and abrupt demographi­c declines, his close attention to the tragic fates of small tribes and subtribes, and his piling up of misery upon misery, empty stomach upon empty stomach, and social stress beyond imagining, vibrate with moral outrage. Together they forcefully make his case: during the formative years of our republic and beyond, there was a mounting, merciless, uncoordina­ted but aggressive­ly consistent crusade to eliminate the native residents of the United States from their homelands by any means necessary—and those homelands were everywhere.

For many of us, I suspect, who have researched and taught Indian–white relations most of our lives, Surviving Genocide sets a bar from which subsequent scholarshi­p and teaching cannot retreat. One awaits volume 2 with a mixture of dread for the approachin­g bloodshed and human suffering that Ostler will undoubtedl­y expose and humble amazement at the spiritual fortitude and social stamina that have sustained Native Americans through all this. Q

 ??  ?? ‘The Battle of Bad Axe’; illustrati­on by Henry Lewis, 1857. In Jeffrey Ostler writes, ‘Toward the end of the 1832 Black Hawk War, a cannon aboard the US steamship fired on Sauks and Mesquakies trying to escape US troops by crossing the Mississipp­i River. What the image shows is clearly a massacre, but in an especially striking example of colonial evasion, the caption refers to the event as a battle.’
‘The Battle of Bad Axe’; illustrati­on by Henry Lewis, 1857. In Jeffrey Ostler writes, ‘Toward the end of the 1832 Black Hawk War, a cannon aboard the US steamship fired on Sauks and Mesquakies trying to escape US troops by crossing the Mississipp­i River. What the image shows is clearly a massacre, but in an especially striking example of colonial evasion, the caption refers to the event as a battle.’
 ??  ?? Red Dog, also known as Shunka Luta, circa 1907
Red Dog, also known as Shunka Luta, circa 1907

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