Man of Distinction among Them Alexander McKee and British-Indian Affairs along the Ohio Country Frontier, 1754-1801 |
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Author:
| Nelson, Larry L. |
ISBN: | 978-1-306-30419-1 |
Publication Date: | Apr 2014 |
Publisher: | Kent State University Press
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Book Format: | Ebook |
List Price: | USD $11.99 |
Book Description:
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A Man of Distinction among Them represents an important step in understanding the complexities surrounding the early history of the Ohio Country and the Old Northwest and provides the clearest and most comprehensive portrait of a central figure in that history: Alexander McKee. McKee was a fur trader, land speculator, and agent with the British Indian Department. Fathered by a white trader and raised partly by his Shawnee mother, McKee was at home in either culture and played an active...
More DescriptionA Man of Distinction among Them represents an important step in understanding the complexities surrounding the early history of the Ohio Country and the Old Northwest and provides the clearest and most comprehensive portrait of a central figure in that history: Alexander McKee. McKee was a fur trader, land speculator, and agent with the British Indian Department. Fathered by a white trader and raised partly by his Shawnee mother, McKee was at home in either culture and played an active role in Great Lakes Indian affairs for nearly 50 years. During the Revolution he remained loyal to the Crown and organized the Ohio tribes to oppose American military excursions into the Ohio Country, and he led several successful raids into Kentucky. McKee served as a cultural mediator a go-between who linked the native and European worlds. He exploited his familial affiliation and close economic ties to both communities to encourage trade, foster diplomaticrelations, and forge a military alliance between the British government and the tribes of the Old Northwest. When he first entered the historic record, McKee was a fully accepted, fully participating member of Indian society. At the time of his death he was a fully accepted, fully participating member of Upper Canada's aristocratic British elite.