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Mound City: The Place of the Indigenous Past and Present in St. Louis

Autor Patricia Cleary
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 iun 2024
Nearly one thousand years ago, Native peoples built a satellite suburb of America's great metropolis on the site that later became St. Louis. At its height, as many as 30,000 people lived in and around present-day Cahokia, Illinois. While the mounds around Cahokia survive today (as part of a state historic site and UNESCO world heritage site), the monumental earthworks that stood on the western shore of the Mississippi were razed in the 1800s. But before and after they fell, the mounds held an important place in St. Louis history, earning it the nickname “Mound City.” For decades, the city had an Indigenous reputation. Tourists came to marvel at the mounds and to see tribal delegations in town for trade and diplomacy. As the city grew, St. Louisans repurposed the mounds—for a reservoir, a restaurant, and railroad landfill—in the process destroying cultural artifacts and sacred burial sites. Despite evidence to the contrary, some white Americans declared the mounds natural features, not built ones, and cheered their leveling. Others espoused far-fetched theories about a lost race of Mound Builders killed by the ancestors of contemporary tribes. Ignoring Indigenous people's connections to the mounds, white Americans positioned themselves as the legitimate inheritors of the land and asserted that modern Native peoples were destined to vanish. Such views underpinned coerced treaties and forced removals, and—when Indigenous peoples resisted—military action. The idea of the “Vanishing Indian” also fueled the erasure of Indigenous peoples’ histories, a practice that continued in the 1900s in civic celebrations that featured white St. Louisans “playing Indian” and heritage groups claiming the mounds as part of their own history. Yet Native peoples endured and in recent years, have successfully begun to reclaim the sole monumental mound remaining within city limits.

Drawing on a wide range of sources, Patricia Cleary explores the layers of St. Louis’s Indigenous history. Along with the first in-depth overview of the life, death, and afterlife of the mounds, Mound City offers a gripping account of how Indigenous histories have shaped the city’s growth, landscape, and civic culture.

 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780826223043
ISBN-10: 0826223044
Pagini: 462
Ilustrații: 83 color and B&W illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.95 kg
Editura: University of Missouri Press
Colecția University of Missouri

Recenzii

“Patricia Cleary’s artfully crafted account of St. Louis’s iconic Indian mounds skillfully redresses the systematic erasure of indigenous people and their stories from historical narratives past and present. The book’s superb scholarship and its engaging storyline will make it a must read for academic specialists and history buffs alike and a model for future such studies.”—William E. Foley, author of Wilderness Journey: The Life of William Clark and The Genesis of Missouri: From Wilderness Outpost to Statehood
 
“A powerfully hard-hitting historical rescue operation.”—Robert Michael Morrissey, University of Illinois, author of People of the Ecotone: Environment and Indigenous Power at the Center of Early America
 
"In Mound City, Cleary has written an urban history that every American and Canadian city needs, a history that restores the Indigenous past and continuing presence in the urban landscape. As Cleary reminds us, we were all taught to think and see like settlers. With this dense, beautifully written, and impeccably researched history, Cleary helps us all to take off those blinders. She does so with an unsparingly critical eye without ever losing the familial affection for her home city. We expect there to be the opening chapter about the Indigenous past, but in this book Cleary not only brings the Indigenous history of St. Louis into the twentieth century, she shows us how memory and history have shaped each other throughout the centuries. Even as the mounds of this metropolitan region were destroyed and built over, they were appropriated as part of the city’s civic identity. In short, razing and naming have been two sides of the same coin of development. With this book by Cleary and Ned Blackhawk’s recent book, we begin the process of rediscovering America and acknowledging—in Cleary’s words—“its deep and profound connection to Indigenous peoples, distant, recent, and present."—Jay Gitlin, Yale University, author of TheBourgeois Frontier: French Towns, French Traders, and American Expansion
 
“Although Patricia Cleary’s superb and significant book does not restore the man-made elevations that gave St. Louis its nickname, Mound City allows readers to see what has been cleared from the cityscape: the mounds built by Indians many centuries ago and the more recent history of Indigenous peoples in the creation of the city, their displacement from it, and their continuing struggle against the erasure of their past and presence. Mound City is a major contribution to St. Louis history and a model for how to rewrite urban histories that defy the nineteenth-century myth of ‘vanishing Indians.’”—Stephen Aron, President and CEO, Autry Museum of the American West, author of Peace and Friendship: An Alternative History of the American West

"This groundbreaking book will surprise readers who believe that Indigenous peoples and cultures had little to do with urban development in the United States.  With fresh insight, Cleary shows how the ascendance of St. Louis as a major metropolis proceeded hand in hand with a relentless and only partly successful drive among European colonists and their descendants to expunge Native inhabitants and their material traces from the rapidly growing city.  Ultimately, Mound City stands as a testament to the enduring Native American presence in an important American city.   Cleary brilliantly recounts the desecration and destruction of Indian mounds, but the book is about much more, underscoring America’s failure to come to terms with its Indigenous past.  It deserves a place alongside Walter Johnsons’ The Broken Heart of America on your bookshelf."—Andrew Hurley, University of Missouri-St. Louis, author of Beyond Preservation: Using Public History to Revitalize Inner Cities
 
"Mound City an enlightening, well-researched history that provides readers with a complete view of the creation, use, loss, and legacy of the mounds, alongside dozens of illustrations and images. Whether you’re an avid historian or haven’t encountered the story of the mounds since a grade school field trip, you’ll find interesting details and illuminating narratives in this exhaustive new work.” —St. Louis Magazine

Notă biografică

Patricia Cleary is Professor of History at California State University, Long Beach, where she teaches early American history. She is the author of two other books: The World, the Flesh, and the Devil: A History of Colonial St. Louis and Elizabeth Murray: A Woman’s Pursuit of Independence in Eighteenth-Century America.