Denny's Vocabulary of Shawnee

Denny's Vocabulary of Shawnee

Author: Ebenezer Denny

Publisher: Arx Publishing, LLC

Published: 2005-06

Total Pages: 59

ISBN-13: 1889758655

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This vocabulary is a substantial collection of 404 Shawnee words and phrases collected by Major Ebenezer Denny in January of 1786. It was compiled from Shawnees assembled for treaty at Fort Finney, located along the Great Miami River in the southwestern corner of Ohio, mostly from a woman called "the Grenadier Squaw".


Ridout's Vocabulary of Shawnee

Ridout's Vocabulary of Shawnee

Author: Thomas Ridout

Publisher: Evolution Publishing & Manufacturing

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 72

ISBN-13:

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"Reprinted from: Edgar, Matilda. 1890. Ten Years of Upper Canada in Peace and War, 1805-1815; being the Ridout letters with Annotations. Toronto: William Briggs"--T.p. verso.


Autumn of the Black Snake

Autumn of the Black Snake

Author: William Hogeland

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Published: 2017-05-16

Total Pages: 465

ISBN-13: 0374711585

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William Hogeland's Autumn of the Black Snake presents forgotten story of how the U.S. Army was created to fight a crucial Indian war. When the Revolutionary War ended in 1783, the newly independent United States savored its victory and hoped for a great future. And yet the republic soon found itself losing an escalating military conflict on its borderlands. In 1791, years of skirmishes, raids, and quagmire climaxed in the grisly defeat of American militiamen by a brilliantly organized confederation of Shawnee, Miami, and Delaware Indians. With nearly one thousand U.S. casualties, this was the worst defeat the nation would ever suffer at native hands. Americans were shocked, perhaps none more so than their commander in chief, George Washington, who saw in the debacle an urgent lesson: the United States needed an army. Autumn of the Black Snake tells the overlooked story of how Washington achieved his aim. In evocative and absorbing prose, William Hogeland conjures up the woodland battles and the hardball politics that formed the Legion of the United States, our first true standing army. His memorable portraits of leaders on both sides—from the daring war chiefs Blue Jacket and Little Turtle to the doomed commander Richard Butler and a steely, even ruthless Washington—drive a tale of horrific violence, brilliant strategizing, stupendous blunders, and valorous deeds. This sweeping account, at once exciting and dark, builds to a crescendo as Washington and Alexander Hamilton, at enormous risk, outmaneuver Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and other skeptics of standing armies—and Washington appoints the seemingly disreputable Anthony Wayne, known as Mad Anthony, to lead the legion. Wayne marches into the forests of the Old Northwest, where the very Indians he is charged with defeating will bestow on him, with grudging admiration, a new name: the Black Snake. Autumn of the Black Snake is a dramatic work of military and political history, told in a colorful, sometimes startling blow-by-blow narrative. It is also an original interpretation of how greed, honor, political beliefs, and vivid personalities converged on the killing fields of the Ohio valley, where the United States Army would win its first victory, and in so doing destroy the coalition of Indians who came closer than any, before or since, to halting the nation’s westward expansion.


Elements of a Miami-Illinois Grammar

Elements of a Miami-Illinois Grammar

Author: John Gilmary Shea

Publisher: Evolution Publishing & Manufacturing

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 72

ISBN-13:

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Originally published: Illinois and Miami vocubulary and Lord's prayer. New York: John G. Shea, 1891.


A Vocabulary of the Unami Jargon

A Vocabulary of the Unami Jargon

Author: Thomas Campanius Holm

Publisher: Arx Publishing, LLC

Published: 2005-06

Total Pages: 75

ISBN-13: 1889758639

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From Campanius' Vocabularium Barbaro-Virgineorum, this volume features a vocabulary of the Unami traders' jargon of Lenape-Delaware used along the lower Delaware River, with over 500 entries plus dialogues and speeches recorded in the 1640s. It follows theedition translated by Peter S. Duponceau in 1834. Also included in this volume is William Penn's word-list of the Pennsylvania Indians, which lists 17 words in the jargon.