On the eve of the Seven Years' War in North America, the British crown convened the Albany Congress, an Anglo-Iroquois treaty conference, in response to a crisis that threatened imperial expansion. British authorities hoped to address the impending collapse of Indian trade and diplomacy in the northern colonies, a problem exacerbated by uncooperative, resistant colonial governments. In the first book on the subject in more than forty-five years, Timothy J. Shannon definitively rewrites the historical record on the Albany Congress. Challenging the received wisdom that has equated the Congress and the plan of colonial union it produced with the origins of American independence, Shannon demonstrates conclusively the Congress's importance in the wider context of Britain's eighteenth-century Atlantic empire. In the process, the author poses a formidable challenge to the Iroquois Influence Thesis. The Six Nations, he writes, had nothing to do with the drafting of the Albany Plan, which borrowed its model of constitutional union not from the Iroquois but from the colonial delegates' British cousins. Far from serving as a dress rehearsal for the Constitutional Convention, the Albany Congress marked, for colonists and Iroquois alike, a passage from an independent, commercial pattern of intercultural relations to a hierarchical, bureaucratic imperialism wielded by a distant authority.
A vivid portrait of the Iroquois nation during colonial America offers insight into their formidable influence over regional politics, their active participation in period trade, and their neutral stance throughout the Anglo-French imperial ...
This book is the first scholarly edition of the most popular Native American captivity narrative published in eighteenth-century Britain, that of Peter Williamson, known as 'Indian Peter'.
This volume reveals how the Seven Years’ War reshaped the geopolitical map of North America and the everyday lives of the peoples within it.
This work examines colonial New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania as central to both warfare and the emerging British-Atlantic world of culture and trade.
Her mother, Hanna, had no objection to the marriage, but, according to Indian custom, insisted that they speak with Esther's brother Benjamin, ''without whose determination she could not entirely decide the matter.
Neal Salisbury ( Boston : Bedford Books of St. Martin's Press , 1997 ) , 70 . 5. Ibid . , 49 . 6. All details that follow about Gyles ' life and his narrative come from Alden Vaughan and Edward Clark , eds . , Puritans Among the Indians ...
Examines how the Treaty of Paris of 1763 created unexpected consequences, including confusion among settlers about new boundaries, the weakening of Britain's hold on its American colonies, and growing conflicts between settlers and Indian ...
Rather, the story is much more complicated—and much more interesting.
In Empire's Crossroads, Carrie Gibson offers readers a vivid, authoritative and action-packed history of the Caribbean.
For complaints, see James Axtell, “Colonial America without the Indians,” in Axtell, After Columbus: Essays in the Ethnohistory of Colonial North America (New York, 1988), 222-243; James H. Merrell, “Some Thoughts on Colonial Historians ...