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Sold American : the story of Alaska Natives and their land, 1867-1959
Title:
Sold American : the story of Alaska Natives and their land, 1867-1959
JLCTITLE245:
Donald Craig Mitchell with foreword by Stewart L. Udall.
Publication Information:
Fairbanks : University of Alaska Press, ©2003.
Physical Description:
xv, 544 pages : illustrations, maps ; 26 cm
ISBN:
9781889963372

9781889963365
General Note:
Originally published by University Press of New England, 1997 under the title: Sold American: a story of Alaska natives and their land, 1867-1959: the army to statehood.
Abstract:
"The political, cultural, and socioeconomic struggles of Alaska's Native peoples have a long and difficult history of local, national, and even international import, In two volumes, Donald Craig Mitchell offers a new level of historical detail in this readable account of the political and legal dimensions of Alaska Native land claims through 1971. Sold American is an account of the history of the federal government's relationship with Alaska's Indian, Eskimo, and Aleut peoples, from the United States' purchase of Alaska from the czar of Russia in 1867 to Alaska statehood in 1959. Mitchell describes how, from eighteenth-century the arrival of Russian sea otter hunters in the Aleutian Islands to the present day, Alaska Natives have participated in the efforts of non-Natives to turn Alaska's bountiful natural resources into dollars, and documents how Alaska Natives, non-Natives, and the society they jointly forged have been changed because of this process.
Bibliography Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 501-514) and index.
Added Author:
Personal Name:
William S. Schneider Donor
Contents:
1. Soldiers -- 2. Missionaries -- 3. Capitalists -- 4. Conservationists -- 5. William Paul and the Alaska Native Brotherhood -- 6. Reservations -- 7. James Curry and Alaska Statehood.
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