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Letting The Unspoken Speak: A Reexamination Of The Pueblo Revolt Of 1680, Erin Mchugh Apr 2015

Letting The Unspoken Speak: A Reexamination Of The Pueblo Revolt Of 1680, Erin Mchugh

Armstrong Undergraduate Journal of History

Erin McHugh is a History major in her third year at St. Olaf College, Minnesota. She is a member of Phi Alpha Theta and the Blue Key Society. This summer she will work at the Field Museum in Chicago as an intern in the Education department. After graduation, she plans to attend graduate school to continue her study in history. She dreams of becoming a teacher to inspire others to appreciate history.


From Scouts To Soldiers: The Evolution Of Indian Roles In The U.S. Military, 1860-1945, James C. Walker Jan 2013

From Scouts To Soldiers: The Evolution Of Indian Roles In The U.S. Military, 1860-1945, James C. Walker

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The eighty-six years from 1860-1945 was a momentous one in American Indian history. During this period, the United States fully settled the western portion of the continent. As time went on, the United States ceased its wars against Indian tribes and began to deal with them as potential parts of American society. Within the military, this can be seen in the gradual change in Indian roles from mostly ad hoc forces of scouts and home guards to regular soldiers whose recruitment was as much a part of the United States’ war plans as that of any other group. The gradual …