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Modoc: The Tribe That Wouldn't Die

Modoc: The Tribe That Wouldn't Die
Author: Cheewa James
Publisher: Naturegraph Publishers
Category: Book

List Price: $19.95
Buy New: $13.57
You Save: $6.38 (32%)



Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 160625

Media: Paperback
Edition: First
Pages: 352
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.6 x 1.1

ISBN: 0879612754
Dewey Decimal Number: 979.4004974122
EAN: 9780879612757
ASIN: 0879612754

Publication Date: July 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
MODOC: The Tribe That Wouldn t Die

Cheewa James, a direct Modoc descendant, offers in MODOC: The Tribe That Wouldn t Die an explosive and personal story of her ancestry. A decade of steady research and writing has produced a richly documented, deeply moving narrative. The book also contains 30 fictionalized vignettes.

This book is the most comprehensive ever written about this remarkable tribe, covering Modoc ancestral times, the Modoc War, and the practically unknown story of what happened after the war. Its 350 pages contain over 150 blk/wh and color photographs, many rare and never before published.

In a desperate, last-ditch effort in 1873 to cling to their ancestral lands, the Modoc Indians, numbering some 55 warriors, fought the U. S. Army s most expensive American Indian war. It cost $10,000 in 1873 currency to subdue each Modoc warrior. That is $282,220 in today s money. By the end of the six-month battle, over 1,000 soldiers were involved.

James book documents the massive attempt to rout out the Modocs and their families. The match for the Modoc Stronghold has not been built and never will be...It is the most impregnable fortress in the world, despaired Lt. Thomas Wright, who fought and eventually died in the war. The natural fortification still exists today in the jagged, desolate terrain known as the Lava Beds National Monument, California.

Were it not for Custer s Little Bighorn Battle, the Modoc War would probably be remembered as America s most significant Indian confrontation. Lt. Col. Frank Wheaton, who commanded the military, said in an 1873 comment: I have never before encountered an enemy, civilized or savage, occupying a position of such great natural strength as the Modoc Stronghold. Nor have I ever seen a better armed or more skillful foe.

This war dominated the front pages of newspapers all over America. A brigadier general was killed. Military men dropped like flies and most soldiers never even saw an Indian, as elusive Modocs slipped through the tortuous lava, in and out of the Stronghold.

James book is unique because it reveals for the first time the contents of two sets of letters written 135 years ago by military soldiers who fought in the war. The substance of these letters adds new pages to Modoc history.

It is generally acknowledged that the Modoc culture, including the language, was lost as a result of the war. What is not realized is that the last chapter of that war is not yet written. One hundred and fifty Modoc men, women, and children were put in chains at the end of the war and sent by train as prisoners of war to Oklahoma Indian Territory. Approximately one hundred other Modocs, who did not participate in the war, remained on a reservation in Oregon. Families were split, separated by half a continent. Relatives were torn apart as their wails filled the air. Tribal culture and structure fell into decline.

One hundred thirty-five years later, the descendants of these Modoc people, having the same bloodlines and ancestors, possessing the same family pictures tucked away in drawers and old photo albums, are strangers. They do not know each other.

It is time to unify the Modocs in spirit erase the forced split resulting from those terrible days. What balm that would bring to the souls of those old Modocs. It is time for cousins to meet cousins and kin to know what happened over a century ago. Modocs need to know how they belong to each other even now. We need to build an understanding of other people and raise our children that way. Honor people as the human beings they are, regardless of race, gender, religion, and all the other walls and barriers to diversity that can be concocted.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Book To Read and Share   December 9, 2008
Sacramento Book Review (Sacramento, CA)
Anything but a bland historical account, Modoc rediscovers the astonishing and almost forgotten past of the Modoc people. Without putting spin on the facts, James is still able to show the sheer brutality that her people have endured. Forced wars, attempted mass murder, and social abandonment all can be found on the unbiased pages, one of the most interesting "lost histories" that can be learned about.
It is a comprehensive record of a past that scrambles back from being on the edge of being lost into oblivion, and claws at your moral center. It sandwiches your head between its arms and forces you to look at it, to acknowledge it, and ironically enough you want to do just that. The purpose of knowing history is so that we do not repeat our mistakes, and the mistakes that have been made with the Modoc are ones that we cannot let ourselves make again.



5 out of 5 stars A Great Adventure in History!   September 10, 2008
Jim Bouchard (Brunswick, ME USA)
This is history that reads like a great adventure! The Modocs are a story of bravery, perseverance, adaptability and pride.

Cheewa James has honored her people by telling their story. She has honored us by sharing their story.

Jim Bouchard
Author of Dynamic Components of Personal POWER



5 out of 5 stars The Unbreakable Modoc Spirit   August 26, 2008
Barbara J. Olexer (Milwaukie, OR)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Modoc: The Tribe that Wouldn't Die by Cheewa James, who is the great-granddaughter of the Modoc fighter the white people called Shacknasty Jim. This is an important book in the literature of the American Indian, eminently readable but also scholarly. There have been many books written about the Modoc War of 1873, in which fewer than sixty Indian fighters defeated more than a thousand U.S. soldiers. These books are thrilling to read and make one think long and deeply about Keintpoos (known to history as Captain Jack) and the Modoc people. That they were deeply wronged when war was forced upon them by the settlers and military is no longer in doubt. James brings forward documentation that has been hidden or ignored for more than a hundred years to delineate exactly who were the greedy white men who fomented the war. James writes in a balanced manner, without bitterness and without histrionics. Most writers end their books with the hanging of Captain Jack, Schonchin John, Black Jim, and Boston Charley; James continues and brings the history of the Modocs up to date. President Ulysses S. Grant and his Secretary of War, William Tecumseh Sherman, had hoped the Modocs would be exterminated in the war. When that failed, they exiled the survivors to Oklahoma and gave them into the keeping of a dishonest Indian agent who stole the meager supplies and medicine allotted to them. Ultimately, genocide failed, whereupon the government tried to commit cultural genocide. But the Modoc heart is strong and the Modoc spirit is unbreakable. The book contains many photographs, some dating from before the war, others right up to the present. Includes end notes, bibliography, and index. Reviewed by Barbara J. Olexer, author of The Enslavement of the American Indian in Colonial Times.

The Enslavement of the American Indian in Colonial Times


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