These are the stories of four generations of one family that moved West with the frontier, and of one individual who emerged from the meeting of the frontier with the people who were already there. Elder John Parker, born in Maryland in 1758, had a son, Daniel, in Virginia in 1781. Daniel\u27s son James W. was born in Georgia in 1797, and another, Silas, was born in Tennessee in 1804. James W.\u27s daughter, Rachel, was born in Illinois in 1819, as was Silas\u27s daughter Cynthia Ann in 1826 and his son John in 1829. Cynthia Ann\u27s son, Quanah, was born in Comancherfa in 1849. Several of these stories are well known, although not necessarily by the same people. Daniel Parker, founder of the Two-Seed Predestinarian Baptist movement, is fam...
Dorothy Schwieder knows community history. As a historian at Iowa State University, she investigated...
This fascinating book foregrounds the oral history of Chevato (Billy Chiwat), a Lipan Apache who in ...
Shirley Christian\u27s account of the St. Louis Chouteau family\u27s activities and contributions on...
These are the stories of four generations of one family that moved West with the frontier, and of on...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
The last decade has seen an increasing number of publications dedicated to the history of young peop...
The so-called Battle of Pease River, in which the Comanche Indians purportedly suffered a crucial ...
During the allotment process (1887–1934), the United States established commissions and agencies nat...
Poncas still remember the events surrounding the 1879 verdict that first recognized Constitutionally...
Apache Mothers and Daughters is the narrative saga of four generations of Chiricahua Apache mothers ...
Elizabeth Hampsten wrote Settlers\u27 Children: Growing Up on the Great Plains to answer some basic ...
By 1836, white settlement had moved steadily westward into the Southern Plains, confronting nomadic ...
This extraordinary book is a recasting and retelling of virtually the entire history of the trans-Mi...
It was family pride that initially caused Arlene Jauken of southeast Nebraska to begin to research t...
As those who know him will attest, John Wunder\u27s most important attributes as a scholar are his a...
Dorothy Schwieder knows community history. As a historian at Iowa State University, she investigated...
This fascinating book foregrounds the oral history of Chevato (Billy Chiwat), a Lipan Apache who in ...
Shirley Christian\u27s account of the St. Louis Chouteau family\u27s activities and contributions on...
These are the stories of four generations of one family that moved West with the frontier, and of on...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
The last decade has seen an increasing number of publications dedicated to the history of young peop...
The so-called Battle of Pease River, in which the Comanche Indians purportedly suffered a crucial ...
During the allotment process (1887–1934), the United States established commissions and agencies nat...
Poncas still remember the events surrounding the 1879 verdict that first recognized Constitutionally...
Apache Mothers and Daughters is the narrative saga of four generations of Chiricahua Apache mothers ...
Elizabeth Hampsten wrote Settlers\u27 Children: Growing Up on the Great Plains to answer some basic ...
By 1836, white settlement had moved steadily westward into the Southern Plains, confronting nomadic ...
This extraordinary book is a recasting and retelling of virtually the entire history of the trans-Mi...
It was family pride that initially caused Arlene Jauken of southeast Nebraska to begin to research t...
As those who know him will attest, John Wunder\u27s most important attributes as a scholar are his a...
Dorothy Schwieder knows community history. As a historian at Iowa State University, she investigated...
This fascinating book foregrounds the oral history of Chevato (Billy Chiwat), a Lipan Apache who in ...
Shirley Christian\u27s account of the St. Louis Chouteau family\u27s activities and contributions on...