Káma-Kapúska! Making Marks in Indian Country, 1833–34

Scholarly Article note 11

This extension matches the work of other historians who have found that localized regions with no single dominant trade group could retain Middle Ground dynamics as late as the 1860s. See Jay Gitlin’s articles “Old Wine in New Bottles: French Merchants and the Emergency of the American Midwest, 1795–1835,” Proceedings of the 13th and 14th Meetings of the French Colonial Historical Society 13/14 (1990): 35–57; “On the Boundaries of Empire: Connecting the West to Its Imperial Past,” in Under an Open Sky: Rethinking America’s Western Past, ed. William Cronon, George Miles, and Jay Gitlin (New York: WW Norton, 1991), 71–89; and “Empires of Trade, Hinterlands of Settlement,” in Oxford History of the American West, ed. Clyde A. Milner II, Carol A. O’Connor, and Martha Sandweiss (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), 79–114; as well as histories of Bent’s Fort in southeastern Colorado described in Herman, Romance on the Middle Ground, 289–91.

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