The Indian To-day

The Indian To-day
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Eastman Charles Alexander. The Indian To-day

BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

CHAPTER I. THE INDIAN AS HE WAS

CHAPTER II. THE HOW AND THE WHY OF INDIAN WARS

CHAPTER III. THE AGENCY SYSTEM: ITS USES AND ABUSES

CHAPTER IV. THE NEW INDIAN POLICY

CHAPTER V. THE INDIAN IN SCHOOL

CHAPTER VI. THE INDIAN AT HOME

CHAPTER VII. THE INDIAN AS A CITIZEN

CHAPTER VIII. THE INDIAN IN COLLEGE AND THE PROFESSIONS

CHAPTER IX. THE INDIAN'S HEALTH PROBLEM

CHAPTER X. NATIVE ARTS AND INDUSTRIES

CHAPTER XI. THE INDIAN'S GIFTS TO THE NATION

BIBLIOGRAPHY

TABLE OF INDIAN RESERVATIONSIN THE UNITED STATES

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It is the aim of this book to set forth the present status and outlook of the North American Indian. In one sense his is a "vanishing race." In another and an equally true sense it is a thoroughly progressive one, increasing in numbers and vitality, and awakening to the demands of a new life. It is time to ask: What is his national asset? What position does he fill in the body politic? What does he contribute, if anything, to the essential resources of the American nation?

In order to answer these questions, we ought, first, to consider fairly his native environment, temperament, training, and ability in his own lines, before he resigned himself to the inevitable and made up his mind to enter fully into membership in this great and composite nation. If we can see him as he was, we shall be the better able to see him as he is, and by the worth of his native excellence measure his contribution to the common stock.

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During a long period the fur trade was an important factor in the world's commerce, and accordingly the friendship and favor of the natives were eagerly sought by the leading nations of Europe. Great use was made of whiskey and gunpowder as articles of trade. Demoralization was rapid. Many tribes were decimated and others wiped out entirely by the ravages of strong drink and disease, especially smallpox and cholera. The former was terribly fatal. The Indians knew nothing of its nature or treatment, and during the nineteenth century the tribes along the Mississippi and Missouri rivers suffered severely. Even in my own day I have seen and talked with the few desolate survivors of a thriving village.

In the decade following 1840 cholera ravaged the tribes dwelling along the great waterways. Venereal disease followed upon the frequent immoralities of white soldiers and frontiersmen. As soon as the Indian came into the reservation and adopted an indoor mode of life, bronchitis and pneumonia worked havoc with him, and that scourge of the present-day red man, tuberculosis, took its rise then in overcrowded log cabins and insanitary living, together with insufficient and often unwholesome food. During this period there was a rapid decline in the Indian population, leading to the now discredited theory that the race was necessarily "dying out" from contact with civilization.

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