The Modoc War by Robert Aquinas McNally
Author:Robert Aquinas McNally [McNally, Robert Aquinas]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: SOC021000 Social Science / Ethnic Studies / Native American Studies, HIS036050 History / United States / Civil War Period (1850-1877), HIS028000 History / Native American
ISBN: 978-1-4962-0422-6
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Published: 2017-08-27T20:00:00+00:00
⢠⢠â¢
The Applegates recognized that the killing of Canby and Thomas changed the political context. With Canby and Thomas venerated as martyrs and the war elevated to the cosmic plane, the Applegatesâ plan to rid the range of every last Modoc now had every chance of succeeding. Opposition to a violent final solution was bound to fade away as so much Quaker Indian-loving.
âYour letter came yesterdayâsame day got news of killing of Genl Canby and Thomas and wounding Meacham &c,â Ivan Applegate wrote to brother Oliver; âwe are all O.K. any how no man will dare more to hold up for âCapt. Jack.â . . . Keep cool and quiet, and all will work out right yet.â15 Ivan grasped an important political point: now that the war had gone cosmic, no one outside the Stronghold dared argue that Canby and Thomas were ordinary wartime casualties.
Had they been there to comment, Canby and Thomas would have agreed. They saw the demise of the Modoc nation and the ethnic cleansing of their land as the inevitable working of Godâs plan, civilizationâs advance, and the nationâs manifest destiny. The general and the minister imagined themselves as divinely chosen representatives of the superior, Christian civilization commanding the pagan primitives to accept annihilation. When Canby asserted that the Modocs dared not attack the peace commissioners, he was claiming the protection of civilizationâs inevitability and assuming, wrongly, that the Modocs saw matters in the same light. Thomas boasted that he placed himself in Godâs hands, trusting that the Almighty had to be on the side of a man who claimed the purest of hearts. In a cosmic conflict, God sides with the good guys.
Canby and Thomasâs attitude toward Indians was paternalistic, in the wordâs literal meaning. They saw themselves as parents possessed of wisdom and right and the Modocs as children needing direction and salvation. The Natives had no choice but to bend to Godâs will and American civilizationâs progress.
Just before Kientpoos shot him, Canby spoke in this demeaning manner to the Modocs, according to Fox: âNothing could have been kinder than his speech to these savages, and the kind old gentleman talked to them as if they had been his own children.â16 Jeff Riddle, Tobyâs son, recalled Thomas explaining to his mother the feelings he held for Indians: âWe have got to deal with the Indian just the same as we have to with children. You see, Sister Tobey, we must treat them with kindness. . . . They will believe what we tell them.â17
Canby and Thomasâs refusal to heed Riddleâs warnings that the Modocs planned to kill them arose from this same cosmic paternalism. It blinded them, too, to the Modocsâ desperation. To believe Riddle and to see that the Modoc people were desperate to fend off their annihilation by any means necessary was to treat Indians as equals. That Canby, Thomas, and almost all of European America refused to do.
⢠⢠â¢
The pitting of good against evil in a cosmic war eliminated any rules of engagement tempered by ethics and morality.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Africa | Americas |
Arctic & Antarctica | Asia |
Australia & Oceania | Europe |
Middle East | Russia |
United States | World |
Ancient Civilizations | Military |
Historical Study & Educational Resources |
Magic and Divination in Early Islam by Emilie Savage-Smith;(1449)
Ambition and Desire: The Dangerous Life of Josephine Bonaparte by Kate Williams(1273)
Papillon by Henry Charrière(1260)
Bohemians, Bootleggers, Flappers, and Swells: The Best of Early Vanity Fair by Bohemians Bootleggers Flappers & Swells- The Best of Early Vanity Fair (epub)(1253)
Twelve Caesars by Mary Beard(1134)
Operation Vengeance: The Astonishing Aerial Ambush That Changed World War II by Dan Hampton(1109)
What Really Happened: The Death of Hitler by Robert J. Hutchinson(1066)
London in the Twentieth Century by Jerry White(1046)
Time of the Magicians by Wolfram Eilenberger(1026)
Twilight of the Gods by Ian W. Toll(1020)
The Japanese by Christopher Harding(1017)
Lenin: A Biography by Robert Service(979)
The Devil You Know by Charles M. Blow(929)
Freemasons for Dummies by Hodapp Christopher;(889)
A Social History of the Media by Peter Burke & Peter Burke(880)
Napolean Hill Collection by Napoleon Hill(860)
The Churchill Complex by Ian Buruma(855)
The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self by Unknown(852)
Henry III by David Carpenter;(842)
