Troubled Trails

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESSISBN: 9781607811299

The Meeker Affair and the Expulsion of Utes from Colorado

Price:
Sale price$64.99
Stock:
Out of Stock - Available to backorder

By Robert Silbernagel, Foreword by Floyd O'Neil
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
410 g
Pages:
304

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Robert Silbernagel has been writing for Colorado news-papers since 1975. He is currently editorial page editor at The Daily Sentinel in Grand Junction and has earned several awards from the Colorado Press Association.

List of Illustrations Foreword by Floyd A. O'Neil Preface Acknowledgments List of Individuals Involved in the Meeker Affair and Its Aftermath 1. Nicaagat Confronts Josephine 2. The Battle at Milk Creek and the Killings at the White River Indian Agency 3. Hostages in the Borderlands 4. Trail Section 1 5. Nicaagat 6. Hellbent for Help 7. Horse Power 8. Trail Section 2 9. Josephine Meeker 10. She-towitch to the Rescue 11. Nicaagat Versus Nathan 12. Trail Section 3 13. The Word Gets Out 14. Trail Section 4 15. Outrage! 16. The Rescue Trail 17. Chicago Rallies for She-towitch 18. Investigation, Frustration, and Farce 19. The Trail to Washington 20. The Colorado Plan 21. The Trail to Utah 22. The Final Trail for Nicaagat and Josephine Epilogue Introduction to the Appendices Appendix I. How Many Fought at Milk Creek?: Supplement to Chapter 2 Appendix II. Faster Horses: Supplement to Chapter 6 Appendix III. Mormons on Their Minds: Supplement to Chapter 9 Appendix IV. One Family's History: Supplement to Chapter 10 Appendix V. Powell Speaks Out: Supplement to Chapter 13 Appendix VI. The Final Skirmish: Supplement to Chapter 16 Appendix VII. Colorow: Supplement to Chapter 18 Appendix VIII. What Happened to the Utes' Horses?: Supplement to Chapter 21 Notes Bibliography Index

"Sibernagel has given life and color to the major figures. He not only provides an even-handed account, based on 'accurate historical facts,' but uses the oral history of the Indian people involved. He has proven that it is possible to reinterpret old and available written sources to shed new light on worn-out storylines and beliefs."-Veronica E. Tiller, author of Culture and Customs of the Apache Indians "Troubled Trails successfully illuminates these poorly studied events, rectifies historiographic errors, and integrates previously absent Ute perspectives into the historical record. A welcome addition to the histories of the intermountain West, Ute peoples specifically, and the histories of native dispossession more broadly."-Montana: The Magazine of Western History "[A] thoroughly researched and fast-moving account."-Colorado Book Review "A powerful and provocative story that draws us into the time and mind of western Colorado during the 1870s and 80s. Through Silbernagel's meticulous research we can more fully appreciate the social, economic, and cultural differences that created the 'perfect storm' of distrust and misunderstanding of the two cultures. Readers will find this to be fascinating reading."-Mike Perry, Executive Director, Museum of Western Colorado "Troubled Trails will become a benchmark book in Colorado history....[Silbernagel is] a sensitive writer who maintains a professional journalistic balance in his assessment of court documents, newspaper accounts, Congressional testimony and valuable Indian oral histories....[This is] a fine book deserving of a wide audience."-The Daily Sentinel, Grand Junction "Silbernagel provides believable reconstruction that ties topography to historic account.... It is not a rehash but fresh insight into certain aspects of this twice-told tale. This book makes [a valuable contribution] in further understanding a complex series of events that pushed a relatively peaceful Indian group from the beautiful, mineral-rich mountains of Colorado to the high deserts of Utah."-Utah Historical Quarterly

You may also like

Recently viewed