Research Catalog

We are not savages : Native Americans in Southern California and the Pala Reservation, 1840-1920

Title
  1. We are not savages : Native Americans in Southern California and the Pala Reservation, 1840-1920 / Joel R. Hyer.
Published by
  1. East Lansing : Michigan State University Press, ©2001.
Author
  1. Hyer, Joel R.

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Details

Description
  1. v, 268 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations; 24 cm.
Summary
  1. "On a cool, autumn day in October 1902, a group of Indians, known as Cupenos, noticed a white man approaching their village of Agua Caliente, located in a beautiful mountain valley in southern California. The unexpected guest was a farmer, a federal employee assigned to teach Native Americans how to raise crops. The stranger had come to assist the Cupenos and other local Indians in preparation to leave their homelands and remove to the Pala Reservation, more than fifty miles away. On the following day, Cupenos, along with their Luiseno and Kumeyaay neighbors, gathered together to discuss the stranger's demands. One person stood up and declared with firm resolve, "We do not need a farmer to help us, we are not savages." Others agreed. The assembly of Indians then invited the white man to depart." "In "We Are Not Savages," Joel R. Hyer traces the history of the Cupenos, Luisenos, and Kumeyaays, recounting how the federal government ultimately forced more than one hundred of their numbers onto the Pala Reservation. He also considers the diverse and complex methods the U.S. government used to Americanize these Indians. Yet, this is much more than a study in federal Indian policy. Hyer places local Indians in the center of his work. Basing his research on reservation records, government documents, interviews, and other sources, he demonstrates the strategies the Cupenos used to respond to pressures and problems created by outsiders. Hyer's sympathetic account offers new insight into such issues as Indian health and education, acculturation, and cultural persistence. "We Are Not Savages" is a tale of survival, resistance, and accommodation."--Jacket.
Series statement
  1. Native American series
Uniform title
  1. Native American series.
Alternative title
  1. Native Americans in Southern California and the Pala Reservation, 1840-1920
Subject
  1. Indians of North America > Relocation > California > Pala Indian Reservation
  2. Indians of North America > California > Pala Indian Reservation > Government relations
  3. Indians of North America > California > Pala Indian Reservation > Social conditions
  4. Indians, Treatment of > California > Pala Indian Reservation
  5. Luiseño Indians > California > Pala
  6. Cupeño Indians > California > Pala
  7. Cupeño Indians
  8. Indians of North America > Government relations
  9. Indians of North America > Relocation
  10. Indians of North America > Social conditions
  11. Indians, Treatment of
  12. Luiseño Indians
  13. Cupeño (volk)
  14. Kumeyaay (volk)
  15. Luiseño (volk)
  16. Gedwongen migratie
  17. Reservaten
  18. Overheidsbeleid
  19. Indiens Pala Indian reservation. > Amérique du Nord > Californie (États-Unis) > Transfert
  20. Indiens Pala Indian reservation > Amérique du Nord > Californie (États-Unis) > 02779430X
  21. Indiens Pala Indian reservation > Amérique du Nord > Californie (États-Unis) > Conditions sociales
  22. Indiens, Attitudes envers les Pala Indian reservation. > Californie (États-Unis)
  23. Iwi taketake
  24. Pala Indian Reservation (Calif.) > History
  25. California > Pala
  26. California > Pala Indian Reservation
Genre/Form
  1. History
Contents
  1. The Cupeños, Luiseños, and Kumeyaays: oral traditions and culture -- Invasion from the south -- Invasion from the east -- Manipulative laws and the anatomy of resistance: the 1850s -- "To give them permanent homes": the birth of the Pala Reservation, 1860-1880 -- A cultural "cold war" in southern California: 1880-1901 -- A California trail of tears: removal of native Americans from Warner's Ranch to Pala -- A new life on the Pala Reservation -- Education and the Pala Indian School: 1903-1920 -- Americanizing forces and the continuation of Cupeño culture: 1903-1920.
Owning institution
  1. Princeton University Library
Bibliography (note)
  1. Includes bibliographical references (p. 247-262) and index.