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Civil
War Years
This anti-Native
American sentiment is echoed in books of the era such as Andrew
Peabodys The Hawaiian Islands
(1865), which claimed that a law of the divine Providence
caused some races to submit to those of superior physical
and intellectual vigor:
Under
this law . . . the aborigines of North America will ultimately
disappear, and the humane policy which ought to have been
pursued to them from the first would not have ensured their
preservation in the land, though it would have averted the
condemnation of blood-guiltiness from the European settlers.
(Page
18)
Despite
the prevalence of beliefs such as Andrew Peabody's, the Union
Army welcomed many Native American volunteers to fight in the
Civil War. James
Blunts December 2, 1862 letter to Kansas Citizens
requests aid to nearby refugee Indians driven from their
homes by the Rebel for no other reason than adhering in
their allegiance to their great Father.
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