White Man's Wicked Water
The Alcohol Trade and Prohibition in Indian Country, 18021892
William E. Unrau
256 pages, 30 photographs, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0779-2, $30.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0964-2, $14.95
"The inordinate
indulgence of Indians in spiritous liquors is one of the most
deplorable consequences which has resulted from their intercourse
with civilized man."
--Governor Lewis Cass, Michigan Territory, 1827
"Often I have been compelled to ask myself, 'Who is
the civilized and who is the savage?' Their principal vices are
emphatically our vices. If they get drunk it is upon our whiskey.
. . . [A]nd yet we claim to be 'civilized' and freely deal out
to them the epithet 'savage.'"--The Reverend William H.
Goode, reflecting on his early 19th-century sojourn in Indian
Country
In White Man's Wicked Water, Unrau tells the compelling
story of how an alcohol-sodden society introduced drink to the
Indians. That same society then instituted futile policies to
control the flow of alcohol to tribes who, as one superintendent
put it, "have not the moral force to resist temptation."
Unrau dispels that racial-deficiency theory and debunks the belief
that prohibition was carried out by well-intended reformers.
Unrau shows that, contrary to the perniciously false image
of the innately "depraved savage," Indians actually
learned their "uncivil" behavior by emulating--in hopes
of accommodating--"civilized" men. Indian inebriation
in the nineteenth century, he shows, essentially mimicked the
habits of white Americans who--spurred on by prevailing attitudes
and federal law--were aspiring to integrate the natives into
the cultural mainstream. Prohibition zealots, intent upon soothing
white anxieties, were far more concerned with this goal than
with stemming the flow of alcohol.
Scholars have often viewed the sale of alcohol to Native Americans
as a ploy by Euro-Americans to trick them into unfair land and
trade deals. But Unrau makes it clear that alcoholic consumption
by Native Americans was the inevitable consequence of cultural
confluence, not of conscious white subversion.
To support his arguments, Unrau has closely examined previously
neglected records pertaining to illicit alcohol trafficking,
its tie to the land-cession/annuity-distribution system, and
the influence of federal subsidy to non-Indian, western development.
From these sources, he provides surprising new insights into
alcohol use and abuse in relation to Indian removal. Unrau also
sheds new light on nineteenth-century prohibition attempts in
the trans-Missouri West (primarily Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma)
up to the absolutist prohibition law of 1892.
"Unrau draws upon an impressive array of Indian petitions,
official reports, court records, and treaties to show how the
West was really won. This detailed chronicle offers abundant
evidence that alcohol both encouraged white conquest and destroyed
native Americans."--W. J. Rorabaugh, author of The
Alcoholic Republic: An American Tradition
"Indian alcoholism is a subject fraught with myths and
stereotypical images. White Man's Wicked Water offers
relief from this unhappy landscape by cataloguing the weakness,
greed, and legal shenanigans that defeated prohibition efforts
throughout the nineteenth century."--Frederick E. Hoxie,
author of A Final Promise: The Campaign to Assimilate the
Indians, 18801920
"An excellent analysis of the impact of alcohol upon
Native American communities in the nineteenth century. Unrau
explores and documents the problems associated with one of the
darker sides of acculturation or accommodation. His study also
illustrates the impact of Native American drinking patterns on
the development and implementation of American Indian policy."--R.
David Edmonds, author of The Shawnee Prophet
WILLIAM E. UNRAU is Endowment Association Distinguished
Research Professor at Wichita State University. He is author
of Mixed-Bloods and Tribal Dissolution:
Charles Curtis and the Quest for Indian Identity, The
Kansa Indians: A History of the Wind People, 16731873,
and (with Craig Miner) The End of Indian
Kansas: A Study of Cultural Revolution, 18541874.
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