To intermix with our white brothers Indian mixed bloods in the United States from earliest times to the Indian removals / [electronic resource] :
Thomas N. Ingersoll.
- Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press, c2005.
- xxi, 450 p. : ill., ports.
Includes bibliographical references p. (374-425) and index.
Introduction: John or Teyoninhokarawen? -- Policies to limit race mixture in early North America from earliest times to 1776 -- Becoming sons and daughters of the forest : racial mixture in the American colonies and revolutionary states from earliest times to the 1830s -- "Dark-eyed Houris of the Metiff blood" : mixed bloods as "halfbreed" outcasts -- Mixed bloods and a "middle ground" of acculturation -- Mixed bloods and the rise of racial formalism : from Jefferson to Jackson -- Defenders of the homeland and racial pluralists, or, "A pascle of designing speculating individuals?" : mixed-blood leaders, racial formalism, and federal removal policy -- Epilogue: Mixed bloods after the era of the removals.
Electronic reproduction. Palo Alto, Calif. : ebrary, 2011. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries.
Indians of North America--Mixed descent. Indians of North America--Cultural assimilation. Indians of North America--Government relations. Racially mixed people--History.--United States