Imperial Valley Press

McCullough’s new book on pioneers’ history draws criticism

- BY RUSSELL CONTRERAS

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — David McCullough is one of the country’s most beloved historians, known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning biographie­s of Harry Truman and John Adams, acclaimed works on the Brooklyn Bridge and Panama Canal, and for narrating such famous documentar­ies as Ken Burns’ “The Civil War.”

But with his latest book, “The Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West,” McCullough is seeing some of the sharpest criticism of his career.

Days after the book was released and reached Amazon.com’s top 20 best-seller list, a new generation of historians, scholars and activists took to social media to accuse McCullough of romanticiz­ing white settlement and downplayin­g the pain inflicted on Native Americans. Criticism also has come from many reviewers, including in The Washington Post and The New York Times.

“He adopts settlers’ prejudiced language about ‘savages’ and ‘wilderness,’ words that denied Indians’ humanity and active use of their land,” Harvard history professor Joyce E. Chaplin wrote in a review for The Times on Monday.

“He also states that the Ohio Territory was ‘unsettled.’ No, it had people in it, as he slightly admits in a paragraph on how the Indians ‘considered’ the land to be theirs.”

McCullough tells the story of a group of New Englanders, led by The Rev. Manasseh Cutler, who in the late 18th century ventured into the Northwest Territory — now Ohio — to create communitie­s.

The author told The Associated Press in a recent interview that he wanted to write about people not widely known to the general public.

“I like to write about people who set out to do something that is thought to be impossible. And how they run into more complicate­d turns and tests of their fortune than they ever imagined or expected, and how they don’t give up,” he said.

McCullough continued that the early Ohio settlers he writes about “go out there and there’s nothing: no highways, no roads, no bridges, no hospitals, to say the least, and no anesthetic . ... And they put up with adversitie­s of a kind even they couldn’t have anticipate­d: epidemic diseases like smallpox and influenza, accidents of all kind, the premature death of children.”

Critics say McCullough is relying too heavily on the perspectiv­e of whites who saw themselves as taming a primeval wilderness.

The book relies on old stereotype­s about American Indians and overlooks the complex and diverse Native American tribes and cultures already there, they say.

Detractors have seized on one particular line in which McCullough describes white settlers being surrounded by Native Americans during a conflict.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JACQUELYN MARTIN ?? In this May 13, 2011, file photo, historian and author David McCullough poses at the National Portrait Gallery, in Washington.
AP PHOTO/JACQUELYN MARTIN In this May 13, 2011, file photo, historian and author David McCullough poses at the National Portrait Gallery, in Washington.

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