Conclusion
By the turn of the nineteenth century, there were scant traces of the northeast’s former Native power. Wabanaki themselves struggled to hold on to their maritime past as Euro-American powers confined them to small reserves on land and then worked to forget their history of conflict, dependency, and defeat at the hands of a powerful Indian confederacy. Romantic notions of the “vanishing Indian” became commonplace in nineteenth century New England society, and coupled with a similar romanticization of pirates, Anglo- Americans increasingly lost sight of this dark chapter of their past.
Keyword(s):
1902 ◽
Vol 146
(15)
◽
pp. 392-392
Keyword(s):
2003 ◽
Vol 30
(2)
◽
pp. 299-316
◽
Keyword(s):
2013 ◽
Vol 40
(2)
◽
pp. 244-256
◽
Keyword(s):