Re: Indian veterans

Mary Diabo-Fadden (e9jj@vax5.cit.cornell.edu)
Thu, 18 Feb 1993 11:42:00 EST


Dear Brian,

I will send you something in the mail but for now, here are some books I
came up with:

AMERICAN REVOLUTION
1) Graymont, Barbara. 1972. The Iroquois in the American Revolution.
Syracuse University Press.
2) Grinde, Donald, Jr. 1977. The Iroquois and the Founding of the
American Nation. Indian Historian Press, San Francisco.
3) Lyons, Oren. 1991. Exiled in the Land of the Free: Democracy,
Indian nations and the US constitution. Clear Light Publishers, San Francisco.
4) Johansen, Bruce. 1981. Forgoteen Founders: Benjamin Franklin, the
Iroquois and the Rationale for the American Revolution. Gambit Press,
Ipswich, Mass.
5) Barreiro, Jose editor. 1988. Indian Roots of American Democracy.
Northeast Indian Quarterly, Volume Iv and V (Winter 1987 and Spring 1988)
6) Penrose, Maryly. 1981. Indian Affairs Papers, American Revolution.
Liberty Bell Associates, Franklin Park, NJ.
7) Blacksnake, Governor. 1989. Chainbreaker: The Revolutionary War
memoirs of Governor Blacksnake as told to Benjamin Williams. University
of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.

CIVIL WAR
1) Hauptman, Laurence. 1992. The Iroquois in the Civil War: from battle-
field to reservation. Syracuse University press, Syracuse NY.
2) Armstron, William. 1978. Warrior in two camps: Ely S. Parker, Union
General and Seneca Chief. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse NY.
3) Rampp, Larry. 1975. The Civil War in the Indian Territory. Presidial
Press, Austin Tx.

WORLD WAR II
1) Bernstein, Alison. 1991. American Indians and World War II: Toward a
New Era In Indian Affairs. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.
2) Kawano, Kenji. 1990. Warriors: Navajo Code Talkers. Northland Pub.,
Flagstaff Arizona.
3) Hemingway, Albert. 1988. Ira Hayes, Pima Marine. University Press
of America, Lanham, MD.

I apologize for the typos. I'm sure there are many more but these were the
ones I could come up with.

Mary Diabo-Fadden
Cornell University
E9JJ@vax5.cit.cornell.edu