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The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic
Angie Debo

The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw Republic

University of Oklahoma Press (Jun 1972)
0806112476
| Paperback
314 pages | 5.4 x 8 inch | English
Dewey 970.3
LC Classification E99.C8.D4

Subject

  • Choctaw Indians
  • Choctaw Indians - Government Relations
  • Choctaw Indians/ Government Relations
  • Social Science / Ethnic Studies / Native American Studies

Plot

Here is the story of the Choctaws, a proud and gifted tribe among the Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. It is the record of a people whose forced migration from their ancestral homes in the South to what is now Oklahoma and whose subsequent efforts from the Civil War to the close of the century to maintain an autonomous government and institutions form a distinctive and arresting chapter in the history of the West. While the political, social, and economic customs of the Choctaws were closely circumscribed, the thread of Choctaw history was at all times closely interwoven witht he larger fabric of American history as a whole. Choctaw law was a curious combination of ancient tribal custom and Anglo-American legal practice; Choctaw churches and schools were copied almost wholly from the white man’s society; and Choctaw economic institutions represented an attempt to adjust the customs of tribal control of the land to the white system of individual ownership.

Personal

Location E99.C8.D4 DEB 1989
Index 3259
Added Date Oct 02, 2017 19:57:59
Modified Date Aug 31, 2018 19:10:00