Tohopeka
Rethinking the Creek War and the War of 1812
New attention to material culture and documentary and archaeological records fills in details, adds new information, and helps disabuse the reader of outdated interpretations.
Susan M. Abram / Kathryn E. Holland Braund/Robert P. Collins / Gregory Evans Dowd /
[…] Tohopeka offers compelling analyses and uses new evidence to show how a localized Creek civil war had enormous implications for the course of American history.'
—The Journal of Southern History
'An interesting, interdisciplinary collection of essays on a timely topic,quite readable by the non-specialist.'--Robbie Ethridge, coeditor of Light on the Path: The Anthropology and History of the Southeastern Indians
Tohopeka is an important and timely volume that offers fresh insights into the War of 1812 and overlapping Creek War. As a whole, the book busts many long-held myths and alters our most basic interpretations of the southern conflicts.’—Andrew K. Frank, author of Creeks and Southerners: Biculturalism on the Early American Frontier and editor of Early Republic: People and Perspectives
List of Illustrations
Foreword: A Deliberate Passion by Marianne Mills
Preface by Jay Lamar
Acknowledgments
Introduction by Kathryn E. Holland Braund
1. Causalities and Consequences of the Creek War: A Modern Creek Perspective by Robert G. Thrower
2. Thinking outside the Circle: Tecumseh's 1811 Mission by Gregory Evans Dowd
3. "A Packet from Canada": Telling Conspiracy Stories on the 1813 Creek Frontier by Robert P. Collins
4. Red Sticks by Kathryn E. Holland Braund
5. Before Horseshoe: Andrew Jackson's Campaigns in the Creek War Prior to Horseshoe Bend by Tom Kanon
6. Cherokees in the Creek War: A Band of Brothers by Susan M. Abram
7. Horseshoe Bend: A Living Memorial by Ove Jensen
8. Fort Jackson and the Aftermath by Gregory A. Waselkov
9. "We Bleed Our Enemies in Such Cases to Give Them Their Senses": Americans' Unrelenting Wars on the Indians of the Trans-Appalachian West, 1810<n>1814 by John E. Grenier
10. "Where All Behaved Well": Fort Bowyer and the War on the Gulf, 1814<n>1815 by David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler
11. Archaeology, Geography, and the Creek War in Alabama by Craig T. Sheldon Jr.
12. Digging Twice: Camps and Historical Sites Associated with the War of 1812 and the Creek War of 1813<n>1814 by James W. Parker
Afterword: The Western Muscogee (Creek) Perspective by Ted Isham
Appendix 1: Current Preservation Status of Major Creek War/War of 1812 Sites in Alabama
Appendix 2: Known and Potential Archaeological Sites in Alabama
Bibliography
Contributors
Index