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Part historical narrative, part travelogue, and part environmental plea, this book recounts an astonishing journey. Joseph, chief of the peaceable Nez Perce band in Oregon's Wallowa Valley, had long sworn to uphold the dying words of his father: "This country holds your father's body. Never sell the bones of your mother and your father." Yet, in 1877, as the U.S. government confined the tribe to ever smaller reservations, the fateful decision of several young Nez Perce warriors to attack the settlers set an exodus in motion. For eleven weeks, seven hundred men, women, and children traveled 1,700 miles, pursued by the U.S. Army. Just forty miles from the Canadian border, the tribe survived a calamitous five-day siege until Joseph could no longer bear his people's suffering and surrendered. This book intercuts the Nez Perce's fight for survival with the author's own travels across the same yet altered terrain, the mountains, forests, badlands, and prairies of modern-day Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana.--From publisher description.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Government relations, History, Nez Percé Indians, Nonfiction, Relocation, Travel, Wars, 1877, Nez Percé Indians, Indians of north america, west (u.s.), Indians of north america, government relations, Indians of north america, history, Indians of north america, relocation, Indians of north america, wars, West (u.s.), history, Social conditionsTimes
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Selling Your Father's Bones: America's 140-Year War against the Nez Perce Tribe
Jan 01, 2011, Simon & Schuster
paperback
1416539948 9781416539940
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Selling your father's bones: America's 140-year war against the Nez Perce Tribe
2009, Simon & Schuster
in English
- 1st Simon & Schuster hardcover ed.
141653993X 9781416539933
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3
Selling Your Father's Bones: America's 140-Year War Against the Nez Perce Tribe
2009, Simon & Schuster
in English
1439156425 9781439156421
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Selling your father's bones: the epic fate of the American West
2008, HarperPress
in English
0007242921 9780007242924
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Selling your father's bones: manifest destiny and the American West
2008, Simon & Schuster
in English
141653993X 9781416539933
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7
Selling Your Father's Bones
2008, HarperCollins
Electronic resource
in English
0007287259 9780007287253
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Originally published: London : HarperPress, 2008.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 331-340) and index.
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Work Description
Part historical narrative, part travelogue through the wilds of the West and part environmental polemic, 'Selling Your Father's Bones' is a thrilling journey through the history and wilderness of the stunning area of landscape that is Continental USA.In the summer of 1877, around seven hundred members of the Nez Perce Native American tribe set out on one of the most remarkable journeys in the history of the American West, a 1,700-mile exodus through the mountains, forests, badlands and prairies of modern-day Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming and Montana. They had been forced from their homes by the great wave of settlement that crashed over the West as the American nation was born. Led by their charismatic chiefs, the Nez Perce used their unerring knowledge of the landscapes they passed through to survive six battles and many more skirmishes with the pursuing United States Army, as they raced, with women, children and village elders in their care, towards the safety of the Canadian border. But all Chief Joseph, the young pastoral leader of the exodus, wanted was to return home - to his beloved Wallowa valley, which his dying father had ordered him never to abandon: 'Never sell the bones of your father and your mother. 'Now, Brian Schofield retraces the steps of that epic exodus, to tell the full dramatic story of the Nez Perce's fight for survival - and to examine the forces that drove them to take flight. The white settlement of the West had been largely motivated by patriotic fervour and religious zeal, a faith that the American continent had been laid out by God to fuel the creation of a mighty empire. But as he travels through the lands that the Nez Perce knew so well, Schofield reveals that the great project of the Western Empire has gone badly awry, as the mythology of the settlers opened the door to ecological vandalism, unthinking corporations and negligent leadership, which have lest scarred landscapes, battered communities and toxic environments.
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