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1887 AMERICAN INDIAN PICTORIAL HISTORY SIGNED BY CIVIL WAR GENERAL ANTIQUE RARE

$ 1475.76

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Subject: History
  • Place of Publication: Boston Massachusetts
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Year Printed: 1887
  • Binding: Fine Binding
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Topic: United States
  • Author: Elbridge Brooks
  • Region: North America
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Original/Facsimile: Original
  • Language: English
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Special Attributes: NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN WARS TRIBES SCALPING
  • Condition: INSCRIBED BY CIVIL WAR GENERAL ALSO CONNECTED TO INDIAN WESTERN RESETTLEMENT. Beautiful exterior as shown in photo. BRIGHT gilt decoration. Binding is good, some weakness in front hinge but still holding well. No torn, loose, or missing pages. Pages are clean and bright. Two different owners' names, etc., handwritten on first endpaper and also on title page. A great example of this very rare 19th-century Native American title. -- CELL PHONE/APP/FIREFOX USERS: YOU MAY NOT BE SEEING MY COMPLETE LISTING. IF IT APPEARS NO DESCRIPTION ACCOMPANIES THIS AUCTION OR IF DESCRIPTION APPEARS TO BE INCOMPLETE: (1) CLICK ON “SEE MORE DETAILS.” (2) SWITCH TO CHROME BROWSER. OR (3) CONTACT ME.
  • Publisher: D. Lothrop & Co.
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN His Origin, Development, Decline and Destiny. By Elbridge S. Brooks. FIRST EDITION. Published in 1887 by D. Lothrop & Company, Boston. 9” x 7” illustrated cloth hardcover with gilt decoration. Illustrated. 312 pages.
    Condition:
    GOOD ANTIQUE CONDITION. Exterior as shown in photo, cloth a little darkened. Bright gilt decoration. Binding is good. No torn, loose, or missing pages. Text is clean and complete, occasional smudges. Occasional small round brownish marks near the gutter of several pages, about the size of a pencil eraser. Owner's name inside front cover, gift inscription on first endpaper (see Provenance below). A great example of this very rare 19th-century Native American title.
    Provenance:
    There is an important handwritten inscription on the endpaper. At the top of the page appears the name "Rev. R.B. Howard." Below Reverend Howard's name is an inscription, as follows:
    Perhaps my brother will associate this little memento with the Peace Campaign Oct. 27 to Nov. 16 1887; and, with the Divine Blessing, its successful issues in connection with the coming of the British Arbitration deputation. C.H.H. West Medford, November 16, 1887.
    After some research I have concluded that the book was presented to Reverend Rowland Bailey Howard (1834-1892) by his brother, General Charles Henry Howard (1839-1908). General Charles Henry Howard was a Union Brevet Brigadier General in the Civil War. Following the war, General Howard settled in Illinois, worked for the American Missionary Association, became editor of several newspapers and assisted his brother Oliver Howard (founder of Howard University) in founding many colleges and the settling of Native Americans in the West. He also became involved in the American Peace movement and in 1893 was appointed a delegate to the Chicago Peace Congress by the American Peace Society. General Howard's other brother, Reverend Rowland Bailey Howard, to whom the book is inscribed, was also an official of the American Peace Society, which he served as Secretary. Regarding the Peace Campaign referred to by General Howard in his inscription, in 1887, as part of a joint effort by American and British Quakers, a deputation consisting of several members of British Parliament visited their counterparts along with President Grover Cleveland at Washington to promote "Peace and Arbitration" between Great Britain and the United States. It was an event celebrated by citizens of both countries, especially those in the Peace movement.
    General Howard's military career alone is sufficient to warrant interest in a book bearing his inscription and initialed signature. He served at the Battle of Bull Run; the Battle of Fair Oaks (in which he was severely wounded by an exploding artillery shell); the June-July 1863 Gettysburg Campaign; and the Atlanta Campaign including the famous "March to the Sea." But the fact that part of General Howard's post-war career was devoted to the settlement of Native Americans in the western territories makes the placing of his imprimatur on this copy of THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN even more relevant and special.
    Note from Neetmok:
    I originally offered this book at 50, then I noticed a couple other copies have popped up and are being offered at the same price, which seems ridiculous because my book is the one and only copy personally inscribed by a Civil War general whose post-war activities were directly related to Native American history in the West.    In terms of value, other copies, which have no such esteemed provenance, pale by comparison.   Now I'll set my book apart from the others again, by cutting my price by 0.   Not only is mine the most desirable/collectible copy available anywhere in the world, it is also the best bargain too.
    DESCRIPTION:
    Note on Rarity and Value: I refer you to two of my previous sales of this title/edition. Please see
    eBay No. 351254241266
    and
    eBay No. 352057145458
    . The presence of a handwritten inscription by a Civil War Brigadier General only adds to the value of this book.
    Here is a rarity in the annals of 19th-century American Indian literature – a serious and sympathetic study of Indian history by a white author who describes “the mistreatment of the Indian” as “one of the abuses of the age.”
    In THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN, Elbridge S. Brooks traces the American Indian experience from the colonial shores of New England to the high deserts of the Old West. A fascinating, wide-ranging narrative accompanied by pages and pages of antique illustrations.
    Elbridge Streeter Brooks was renowned in the 19th century as an American author, editor, and critic. He made his reputation as an author of numerous works of fiction and nonfiction for younger readers, much of it on historical or patriotic subjects – in fact, some of his patriotic works were issued under the auspices of the Sons of the American Revolution and the Daughters of the American Revolution.
    But in THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN, he sheds the mantle of patriotic storyteller and assumes the more discerning and objective viewpoint of the historian. What great personal fortitude must have been required on the part of Mr. Brooks, who earned his livelihood recording the proud saga of his America, to tell the story of the American Indian, so wronged by the United States government and its people.
    A period advertisement for THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN describes the book thus:
    The first and only complete and consecutive story of the Red Men of America. It is sympathetic but not sentimental, practical but not one-sided, picturesque but not romantic. A book for all Americans to read.
    In the Preface to THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN, Brooks explains why he felt it was important for Americans to do some soul-searching in regard to the original proprietors of the land:
    The popular opinion of the American Indian has for generations been based upon prejudice and ignorance – as thoughtless as it is unreasoning and unjust. The red man of America may be no saint, but he is at least a man and should not be condemned unheard. He has his side of the story quite as much as has his white conqueror.
    Desire, acquisition, superiority, indifference – these have been the steps toward the ostracism that has been visited upon the American Indian, denying him justice and opportunity for advancement since the earliest days of white occupation. It is these barriers to progress that have alike created and complicated the vexed Indian problem.
    This volume does not attempt to state or solve that problem. It simply seeks to arrange in something like complete and consecutive form the story of the North American Indian as he has existed for generations, and as from supremacy in the land of his fathers he has fallen under the ban of the white civilization that conquered and displaced him.
    The mistreatment of the Indian, a recent writer declares, is one of the abuses of the age, and one of the reproaches of civilization. It is high time that the abuse and the reproach should give place to something like fairness and moral sense. If this story of a race that has played its part in the drama of human progress shall lead readers to exchange indifference for interest and contempt for justice, the labor and study that it has involved will not have been in vain.
    If the future of the American Indian is to be brighter and more self-helpful than ever before the credit of this advance is in great measure due to the self-sacrificing exertions of those missionaries of good who have, in spite of heedlessness, and in spite of slur, devoted so much of their lives to the bettering of a misunderstood and unfortunate race.
    To all such, and to all friends of humanity who, despising injustice, seek to convert public opinion into public conscience, this story of the American Indian is gratefully inscribed.
    Contents Are:
    Chapter One ~ The Ancient American
    Chapter Two ~ The Red Man Before Columbus
    Chapter Three ~ Race Divisions and Kinship Ties
    Chapter Four ~ Indian Faiths and Confederations
    Chapter Five ~ Culture
    Chapter Six ~ The Indian Home
    Chapter Seven ~ The Indian Youth
    Chapter Eight ~ Manners and Materials
    Chapter Nine ~ The Coming of the White Man
    Chapter Ten ~ Colonial Injustice
    Chapter Eleven ~ Placing the Responsibility
    Chapter Twelve ~ Pushed to the Wall
    Chapter Thirteen ~ Indian Types
    Chapter Fourteen ~ The Indian's Outlook
    ILLUSTRATIONS INCLUDE:
    Quigualtanqui’s defiance * “The coldest of existing lands” * Ruins called “the Governor’s House,” Yucatan * Skeleton of the megatherium * The mylodon * Hunting the dinornis * An ancient volcano in the Rocky Mountain range * The mammoth and primitive man * Primitive household utensils * Mounds on the Kickapoo River * Skull found in a mound in Tennessee * Skull found in mound in Missouri * Ground plan of “high bank pueblo” * Home of the “village Indians” * In the grand canon of the Colorado * A cliff dwelling * Ruins of an Arizona cliff dwelling * Nature’s wonderland * The home of the ancient American * A study of comparative cranial outlines * An Indian myth * Interior of a partially restored cliff-dweller’s house * Hiawatha, the “river-maker” * Atotarho, the war chief * An Indian village * One of Nature’s highways * The “spoor” of the game * The wounded buffalo * The hunted elk * Shell ornaments and fish hooks * First discoveries * The landing of Columbus * The return of Columbus * An Iroquois scout * The gate of Ladore * In the shadow of Shasta * A Pueblo boy * Powhatan * One of the higher types * Glen Canon * “The marvelous white man” * “The spirit of peace” * An Indian myth * Fighting the stone giant * Coyote fetish * In the land of the fetish * The Navajo of today * Palisaded Iroquois village * In the Moki land * The home of the Columbians * A town of the Zunis * White Buffalo * An Indian’s greeting * “The White Chief” * The domed earth houses of the Pacific tribes * In the Iroquois country * An Iroquois long-house * An admirer of warlike prowess * The Mandan Lodge of the Northwest * Here I discovered five papooses slung to the trees * An education in drudgery * Dreaming of his “medicine” * As happy as a white baby * The Scalp Dance * On the War Trail * The Ceremony of the Wampum Belts * A lesson in archery * A Wampum necklace * Decorated wampum belts * Indian method of lighting fire * Navajo basket work * Indian weapons * Council of chiefs and warriors * So the white man came * “Along the narrow trail the startling tidings sped” * Spanish occupation * The death of his comrade * The pitiless man-hunter * The burial of De Soto * “Killed in the swamp” * “Red man and white” * Civilization distrusts savagery * “Doomed and uncovenanted heathen” * An episode of the French and Indian War * “Justice or war – which?” * “Ho, Waldron, does your hand weigh a pound now?” * “A new feature in the Indian landscape” * Hispaniola * Colonies at the time of the Revolution * Attack on stockade * Military tyranny * In contact with civilization * An episode of the Seminole War * “The white man wanted the land” * Fighting the Indians on the Virginia frontier * The home of the Indian * Types of a fading race * Fra Junipero Serro * The meeting of the races * Charging an Indian camp * The renegade of civilization * Pocahontas and her son * Pontiac, chieftain of the Ottawas * Te-cum-the, Chief of the Shawanoe * Sa-go-ye-wat-ha the Seneca * Ma-ka-tai-me-she-kia-kiah the Sauk * Spotted Tail with his wife and daughter * His story is a simple one * Contact with a higher intelligence * A candidate for Hampton School * The land of their fathers * Pack train leaving a pueblo * In process of civilization * Darkness * Daylight
    DON’T MISS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO OWN THIS RARE AND BEAUTIFUL ACCOUNT OF AMERICA’S FIRST INHABITANTS, THE AMERICAN INDIANS.
    Remember folks, this is an 1887 FIRST EDITION SIGNED BY A CIVIL WAR BRIGADIER GENERAL WHO AIDED IN THE SETTLEMENT OF NATIVE AMERICANS AFTER THE WAR. This book is 131 years old.
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