NATIVE COMMUNITIES & THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
With Truman State University Emeritus Professor of History Daniel Mandell
Before the Revolutionary War, New Englandβs Native communities were active in imperial politics, sending delegates to seek the Crownβs protection against increasingly intrusive and corrupt colonial officials. But when war with England erupted, many of the men went to serve in the local militia and Continental army, or on naval privateers, alongside white and black comrades. As a result, after the war, Native communities embraced democratic rhetoric to defend their lands, autonomy, and religious liberties. Revolution was a process that continued through the early 1800s, and the regionβs Indigenous population was a part of that process, even as they remained a people apart.
Join us for a presentation followed by Q&A.
