List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. A Historical Accounting of the Anishnaabeg People
2. The French Period: The 1600s to 1763
3. The British Period: 1763 to 1795
4. The United States and the Division of the Anishnaabeg Homeland
5. Anishnaabeg Treaty-Making and the Removal Period
6. Twenty-First-Century Conditions, and Conclusion
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
IndexA comprehensive history of the Anishnaabeg people of the Lake Huron borderlands between the United States and Canada.
Phil Bellfy (White Earth Chippewa) is a professor
emeritus of American Indian studies at Michigan State
University. He is the author of Indians and Other Misnomers: A
Cross-Referenced Dictionary of the People, Persons, and Places of
Native North America.
“[Three Fires Unity] provides an important starting point for the
construction of an aboriginal-centered history of the
region.”—Allan K. McDougall, Journal of Anthropological
Research
“Culling data from an array of important Canadian and American
primary sources, Bellfy has indeed uncovered a surprising amount of
cross-border political activity.”—Rebecca Kugel, Studies in
American Indian Literatures
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