Indians in Pennsylvania

by Paul A. W. Wallace

Other authorsWilliam A. Hunter
Paper Book, 1981

Status

Available

Call number

974.8 WAL

Publication

Harrisburg : Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1981.

Description

This classic study of the history of Pennsylvania's Indians, from the time of the European contact forward, was originally published in 1961. This second edition has been revised and updated to incorporate more modern content while keeping Wallace's classic voice and unique perspective. This accessible work explores the primary groups of Indian peoples most important to Pennsylvania's history--its most prevalent, primarily the Delaware or Lenni Lenape and the Susquehannock people, and the outside groups that had the largest impact upon Pennsylvania, primarily the neighboring Iroquois and refugee groups such as the Shawnee. The volume explores customs, governance, belief systems, conflict, migration, and policy, among many other topics. Sympathetic and balanced, this book has long been considered one of the best books on the Indian peoples of Pennsylvania.… (more)

Language

Physical description

xii, 200 p.; 24 cm

Notes/Finding Aids

2 copies

DDC/MDS

974.8 WAL
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