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David Sievert Lavender - The Southwest

Here you can read online David Sievert Lavender - The Southwest full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 1984, publisher: UNM Press, genre: Art. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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First published in 1980 as part of Harper & Rows Regions of America series, this lively account is now available only from the University of New Mexico Press. Focusing on New Mexico and Arizona, it also touches on neighboring states Texas, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and California, as well as northern Mexico. Lavender writes of the Southwest from the time of the earliest Indian inhabitants to the eras of the Spanish conquerors, the French fur trappers, and the eventual expansion of the United States into the area. He describes conflicts between Mexico and Spain, Mexico and Texas, and Mexico and the United States and explores the truth behind folklore and legends about cowboys, Indians, and outlaws. He also discusses the regions present-day problemsthe difficulties of relationships among a variety of racial, cultural, and economic groups and the scarcity of usable land, water, and air. Delicious history, soundly investigated and superbly presented, enlivened by a sparkling style and rich in anecdotes and persona sketches. . . . should be read not only in the Southwest, by all Americans who seek knowledge of a region that is daily becoming more important nationallyand internationally.Ray A. Billington

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Page iii
The Southwest
David Lavender
UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO PRESS
Albuquerque
Page iv
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Lavender, David Sievert, 1910
The Southwest.
Reprint. Originally published: 1st ed. New York:
Harper & Row, c1980. (Regions of America Book)
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
1. Southwest, NewHistory. I. Title.
F799.L38 1984 979 83-19740
ISBN 0-8263-0736-1 (pbk.)
Copyright 1980 by David Lavender.
All rights reserved.
University of New Mexico Press paperback edition
reprinted 1984 by arrangement with the author.
Manufactured in the United States of America.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 83-19740.
International Standard Book Number 0-8263-0736-1
(previously ISBN 0-06-012519-5).
Sixth paperback printing, 1998
Page v
To MILDRED
For sharing and sustaining
Page vii
Contents
An Introduction: The People, The Land, The Blazing Sky
1
1. Beginnings
22
2. Don Quixote's New World Cousins
35
3. Porous Frontiers
69
4. Conquest
99
5. Whose Southwest?
139
6. The Anvil of American Indian Policy
168
7. A Sampling of Rogues
209
8. Groping Toward Stability
253
9. New Ways, Old Problems
287
Bibliography and Acknowledgments
317
Index
337

Page viii
Maps
following page
The Spanish Period
71
The American Period
155

Page ix
SOUTHWEST INVOCATION
Picture 2
Oh, our mother, the earth; oh, our father, the sky,
Your children are we, and with tired backs
We bring you the gifts that you love.
Then weave for us a garment of brightness;
May the warp be of the white light of the morning,
May the weft be of the red light of evening,
May the fringes be the falling rain,
May the border be the standing rainbow.
Thus weave for us a garment of brightness
That we may walk fittingly where the birds sing,
That we may walk fittingly where the grass is green,
Oh, our mother the earth; oh, our father the sky.
Tewa Indian chant as recorded at the Museum of New Mexico, Palace of the Governors, Santa Fe
Page 1
An Introduction:
The People, the Land, the Blazing Sky
Southwest Pepper Pot
One of history's most gripping and at the same time most dimly understood adventure stories deals with the peopling of the Americas by immigrants from Asia, their adaptation to the new land, and their ultimate defeat by latecomers from Europe. Physically the American Southwest occupies only a small part of the stage on which the drama took place. It is a significant part, however, because the region's semiarid climate, which delays decomposition, has made it a rich source of aboriginal records. In addition, it is here that troops from the United States and Mexico at last combined to bring about the final defeat of the long-resistant native peoples. Defeatbut not destruction. The point needs emphasis. The Indians of the Southwest are still a force to be reckoned with.
Item. More Indians live in the Southwest than in any other section of the United States, and since 1948 they have been allowed to vote. (Elsewhere in the United States Indian voting dates from 1924.) As a result, local politicians pay at least some attention to this new body of constituents.
Item. Indian reservations occupy 26 percent of the land area of Arizona, plus another 9 percent in New Mexico. Valuable natural resources have been discovered on some of the reservations, and tourists attracted by the Indians' handsome crafts and colorful ceremonies add appreciably to the economic well-being of both states. Local chambers of commerce seldom forget either point.
Item. Since 1946, the United States has allowed all tribes that wish to do so to sue the government over violations of treaties dealing with
Page 2
the original taking of their lands. Many of the southwestern tribes have won substantial compensation. Taught by those cases how to utilize the law for remedying early wrongs, Indian lawyers are now asserting tribal rights to water whose potential value is, at current writing, incalculable. Whatever the figure, it has set a lot of Anglo heads to aching.
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