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Helen Hunt Jackson and her Indian reform legacyHelen Hunt Jackson and her Indian reform legacy

Helen Hunt Jackson and her Indian reform legacy1990

Valerie Sherer Mathes, Valerie Sherer Mathes, ValerieSherer Mathes

About this book

Helen Hunt Jackson and Her Indian Reform Legacy is a detailed account of the last six years of Jackson's life (1879-1885), when she struggled to promote the rights of American Indians displaced and dispossessed by the U.S. government. Valerie Sherer Mathes places Jackson's work within the larger nineteenth-century Indian rights movement and details her crusade of traveling, writing, and lobbying government officials. Jackson's efforts culminated in the publication of A Century of Dishonor, an indictment of the government's Indian policy, and the novel Ramona, a sympathetic portrayal of the plight of California's Mission Indians. Her influence was felt immediately in the actions of subsequent reform workers in the Women's National Indian Association, the Indian Rights Association, and the Lake Mohonk Conference.

Details

First published
1990
OL Work ID
OL2649156W

Subjects

American AuthorsAuthors, AmericanBiographyCivil rightsGovernment relationsIndians in literatureIndians of North AmericaInfluencePolitical and social viewsPonca IndiansSocial reformersJackson, helen hunt, 1831-1885Indians of north america, government relationsIndians of north america, civil rightsÉcrivains américainsBiographiesRéformateurs sociauxPonca (Indiens)

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