University Press of America
Pages: 180
Trim: 7 x 8½
978-0-7618-2885-3 • Paperback • October 2004 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
Paul N. Beck is Associate Professor of History at Wisconsin Lutheran College. Professor Beck holds a Ph.D. in 19th century American History from Marquette University.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Acknowledgments
Chapter 3 "…there exists a nation of barbarians…"
Chapter 4 "I have little confidence in their promises of good conduct…"
Chapter 5 The Grattan Fight: "a piece of foolishness"
Chapter 6 "It will be an expensive cow"
Chapter 7 Blue Water Creek: "By God I am for battle- no peace!"
Chapter 8 "We, of necessity, killed a great many women and children"
Chapter 9 "They have no desire nor wish to fight or prolong the war"
Chapter 10 Epilogue
Chapter 11 Endnotes
Chapter 12 Bibliography
Chapter 13 Index
[The First Sioux War] provides a concise, general overview of the terrible events that would shape federal government policy and subsequent military actions towards the Sioux on the northern Great Plains for over forty years.
— Bob Rea, Oklahoma Historical Society; Nebraska History
[Beck] masterfully reveals the events, motivations, and actions of key participants to the Grattan fight and reveals how the confluence of factors…influenced the future of Plains Indian-United States relations…Beck deserves praise for his study…[which] refocuses attention on an important event in western history.
— Jeffrey D. Means, University of Oklahoma; Western Historical Quarterly
Beck, for example, provides a more balanced account of the First Sioux War, giving equal coverage to each phase of the conflict. He also provides several chapters of useful background information on the Lakotas and their migration to and domination of thePlains, conflicts on the overland trails, and the early government presence in Indian Country. .... Beck's judicious use of quotations and his narrative adroitness make The First Sioux War a smoother read. .... Beck's engaging and readable account of the First Sioux War, however, will be enjoyed by a larger audience...
— Mark R. Ellis, Department of History, University of Nebraska at Kearney; Great Plains Quarterly
...succeed[s] admirably in [its] stated purpose of demonstrating the real significance of this war. ...Beck is especially balanced in his appraisal of the Sioux, discussing fully the depredations of Americans against them while acknowledging practices too often ignored or explained away, such as their penchant for violent expansion at the expense of other Indians and thier barbarous practice of mutilating the bodies of thier enemies.
— Military History Of The West
Beck, for example, provides a more balanced account of the First Sioux War, giving equal coverage to each phase of the conflict. He also provides several chapters of useful background information on the Lakotas and their migration to and domination of the Plains, conflicts on the overland trails, and the early government presence in Indian Country..... Beck's judicious use of quotations and his narrative adroitness make The First Sioux War a smoother read..... Beck's engaging and readable account of the First Sioux War, however, will be enjoyed by a larger audience.
— Mark R. Ellis, Department of History, University of Nebraska at Kearney; Great Plains Quarterly