Free PDF Early Life Among the Indians Volume 34679; Reminiscences from the Life of Benj. G. Armstrong Treaties of 1835 1837 1842 and 1854 Habits and Customs

[Get.L8aw] Early Life Among the Indians Volume 34679; Reminiscences from the Life of Benj. G. Armstrong Treaties of 1835 1837 1842 and 1854 Habits and Customs



[Get.L8aw] Early Life Among the Indians Volume 34679; Reminiscences from the Life of Benj. G. Armstrong Treaties of 1835 1837 1842 and 1854 Habits and Customs

[Get.L8aw] Early Life Among the Indians Volume 34679; Reminiscences from the Life of Benj. G. Armstrong Treaties of 1835 1837 1842 and 1854 Habits and Customs

You can download in the form of an ebook: pdf, kindle ebook, ms word here and more softfile type. [Get.L8aw] Early Life Among the Indians Volume 34679; Reminiscences from the Life of Benj. G. Armstrong Treaties of 1835 1837 1842 and 1854 Habits and Customs, this is a great books that I think are not only fun to read but also very educational.
Book Details :
Published on: 2012-05-20
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Original language: English
[Get.L8aw] Early Life Among the Indians Volume 34679; Reminiscences from the Life of Benj. G. Armstrong Treaties of 1835 1837 1842 and 1854 Habits and Customs

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1892 Excerpt: ...as the beat way of getting along. But the climax came when the traders quit the country and left their families to the Indians care. This led to family troubles. The abandoned woman would go back to her family, where there were probably several children and dependent persons to support and only one or two men to hunt for their living. The addition to the perhaps already heavy burden was hard to Dear. Tho white race were cursed, family talks resulted in aggrivating troubles that were already heavy enough. Division of sentiment in many cases led to bitter quarrels and bloodshed, and in some cases separation between man and wife, a thing unheard of until recent years. The abandoned women have, in many cases, lived to see their former husband married to white women, too proud even to speak to their wife or child of a few years before. I do not wish to reflect on any one or more persons to whom this may be personal but give it for history only. I give no man credit for marrying an Indian woman and claim he gains no honors by so doing, but I do claim that once he has married her he puts himself upon a level with her and really is no better than she and certainly the children are of his blood and he should at least see that they are cared for and educated instead of leaving them to grow up in ignorance with a race he had voluntarily left as unfit for his association. Go upon the reservations and one can see that of those people there now, not one fourth remain that have no white blood in their veins, and two thirds of this amalgamation is traceable to those persons who located themselves among the Indians for the purpose of trading exclusively, Indian agents and government employes. It has always seemed to the Indians that the disposition of traders was purely sel...
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