![]() ![]() West of the Revolution: An Uncommon History of 1776. Saunt’s deeply researched book argues that Indian Removal, as advocates of the policy called it, was not an inevitable chapter in U.S. Hailed for its searing insight, Unworthy Republic transforms our understanding of this pivotal period in American history. Unworthy Republic: The Dispossession of Native Americans and the Road to Indian Territory. Unworthy Republic reveals how expulsion became national policy and describes the chaotic and deadly results of the operation to deport 80,000 men, women, and children. The operation soon devolved into an unofficial policy of extermination, enabled by US officials, southern planters, and northern speculators. In a firestorm of fraud and violence, thousands of Native Americans lost their lives, and thousands more lost their farms and possessions. In May 1830, the United States launched an unprecedented campaign to expel 80,000 Native Americans from their eastern homelands to territories west of the Mississippi River. ![]() Named a Top Ten Best Book of 2020 by the Washington Post and Publishers Weekly and a New York Times Critics' Top Book of 2020Ī masterful and unsettling history of "Indian Removal," the forced migration of Native Americans across the Mississippi River in the 1830s and the state-sponsored theft of their lands. ![]() Winner of the 2021 Bancroft Prize and the 2021 Ridenhour Book Prizeįinalist for the 2020 National Book Award for Nonfiction 'Saunt’s Unworthy Republic is a brilliant, searing account of Indian removal in the 1830s United States: the state-sponsored expulsion of an estimated 80,000 native peoples from their homes east of the Mississippi River and brutal deportation to an ill-defined Indian Territory in the West. ![]()
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