Item Detail
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17786
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8
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13
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English
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'Redeeming' The Indian : The Enslavement of Indian Children in New Mexico and Utah
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Summer 1999
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67
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no.3
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220-241
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This article examined the history of Indian slavery from the time of Christopher Columbus to the late 1800s in Utah and New Mexico. The Mormon practice of purchasing Indian children and the later practice of temporarily placing Indians in homes are mentioned. Today, tribal leaders prefer preservation of Indian identity over the advantages offered by the Anglo culture.
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A "Distinction Between Mormons and Americans" : Mormon Indian Missionaries, Federal Indian Policy, and the Utah War
A Frontier Life : Jacob Hamblin, Explorer and Indian Missionary
Captivity, Adoption, Marriage and Identity : Native American Children in Mormon Homes, 1847-1900
In Sacred Loneliness: The Documents
River Flowing from the Sunrise : An Environmental History of the Lower San Juan
The Overland Journey from Utah to California : Wagon Travel from the City of the Saints to the City of Angels
The True Policy for Utah : Servitude, Slavery, and "An Act in Relation to Service"
Useful to the Church and Kingdom: The Journals of James H. Martineau, Pioneer and Patriarch, 1850-1918, Volume: 1 -
A Comprehensive History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
History of Indian Depredations in Utah
History of Utah
Indian Relations on the Mormon Frontier
Jacob Hamblin : A Narrative of His Personal Experience
Journal of the Southern Indian Mission : Diary of Thomas D. Brown
Mormonism's Negro Policy : Social and Historical Origins
Negro Slavery in Utah
Negro Slaves in Utah
Old Spanish Trail : Santa Fe to Los Angeles
The Mormons and the Ghost Dance
The Trial of Don Pedro Leon Lujan : The Attack Against Indian Slavery and Mexican Traders in Utah
The Walker War : Defense and Conciliation as Strategy