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The Conspiracy of Pontiac and the Indian War after the Conquest of Canada

To the Massacre at Michillimackinac

The Conspiracy of Pontiac and the Indian War after the Conquest of Canada( )
Author: Parkman, Francis
Introduction by: McConnell, Michael N.
ISBN:978-0-8032-8733-4
Publication Date:Oct 1994
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $42.90
Book Description:

Francis Parkman, America's greatest narrative historian, immortal for The Oregon Trail (1849), devoted much of his career to writing about the struggle of France and England for domination in America. The Conspiracy of Pontiac is an account of the Indian wars that occurred on the Appalachian frontier, extending from western Virginia to what is now Wisconsin and Michigan, in 1763-65.   Parkman portrays the inflammatory situation that led up...
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Book Details
Pages:368
Detailed Subjects: History / United States / Colonial Period (1600-1775)
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):13.3 x 20.3 x 1.5 cm
Book Weight:0.666 Kilograms
Author Biography
Parkman, Francis (Author)
Early in his youth, this Boston-born historian was infected with what he called (in language offensive to today's readers) "Injuns on the brain." For the rest of his life, he dedicated himself to writing what he had called at the age of 18 "a history of the American forest."

In 1846, following the completion of his studies at Harvard College, he set out in company with a cousin on an expedition from St. Louis over the Oregon Trail to Fort Laramie, Wyoming, a journey that brought him into close contact with the Lakota Indians.

Back in Boston, he turned the journal that he had kept on the trail into a series of sketches that were published in the Knickerbocker Magazine and afterwards as a book, The California and Oregon Trail, Being Sketches of Prairie and Rocky Mountain Life (1849), now better known by the abbreviated title of a later revised edition, The Oregon Trail.

By this time, Parkman had well underway the historical work that would occupy him during the rest of his life, an account of the French and English in North America, the first installment of which was his History of the Conspiracy of Pontiac and the War of the North American Tribes against the English Colonies, published in 1851.

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