The Christianizing of America
1750-1850 - Birth of a Nation
On the frontiers of the New World Christianity set aside any notions of cheek-turning pacifism and universal brotherhood to embrace the manly notions of rugged individualism and aggressive acquisition. Frontier Christianity was the faith of the Lord’s conquerors, untroubled by the fate of those who had to perish to make way. The Good Book, as interpreted by a new breed of itinerant pastors, reassured them that they were Good People. The guiding hand of Divine Providence itself sanctioned their ruthless greed and the more wealth they could amass was surely indicative of God’s approval. With the Bible in one hand and a rifle in the other the new Americans were claiming their inheritance.
The Making of a Kleptocratic Republic
Ethnic Cleansing Begins
Culture clash
Resistance is Futile
Religious toleration: Good for business
Reason baffles the hicks
The French Disconnection
Revolution
War's end
Ethnic cleansing gathers pace
The Frontier Mentality - Zealots with guns
Divine Will made manifest
The breeding ground of cults
The breeding ground of cults
Why not start your own religion?
Postscript: Fighting Terrorism Since 1492
Sources:
- J. C. H. King, First Peoples, First Contacts (British Museum, 1999)
- Dee Brown, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (Simon & Schuster, 1981)
- Colin Taylor (Ed.), The Native Americans (Chrysalis, 2004)
- Andrew Sinclair, A Concise History of the United States (Sutton, 2000)
- Sydney E. Ahlstrom, A Religious History of the American People (Yale University Press, 1972)
- Jerald C. Brauer, Protestantism in America (Westminster Press, 1953)
- Robert T. Handy, A Christian America (Oxford University Press, 1971)
- Albert J. Raboteau, Slave Religion (Oxford University Press, 1980)
- Francis Jennings, The Invasion of America (Norton, 1976)
- J. Spiller, et al, The United States 1763-2001 (Routledge, 2005)
- Morrison, Commager, Leuchtenburg, The Growth of the American Republic (OUP, 1980)
Related Articles:
Resistance is Futile
– Alice Walker (Anything We Love Can Be Saved).
Vanished World
Cahokia, Illinois, most sophisticated native settlement north of Mexico. Illini Indians were occupying the site when the French arrived in the 17th century. By then, the original inhabitants had long disappeared.
Site of native mounds in the Ohio valley.
Grave Creek Mound (West Virginia), once over 70′ high. It was tunnelled into in 1838 and grave goods found.
From fact to frontier fiction
In the 1830s Joseph Smith worked native American “pyramids” into his yarn about “Nephites”. He also located the Garden of Eden in Missouri.
Worlds in Collision
On the maps of the English, the coastal settlements of Massachusetts, Connecticut, Virginia and the Carolinas originally extended from “sea to sea”.
To the north and west, vast areas were claimed by the French as New France and Louisiana. In Florida, the southwest and along the coast of California were the older settlements of Spain.
With the defeat of the French and Indian forces the colonies had little need of British protection.
A British “Proclamation line” of 1763 tried in vain to stem settlement in Indian lands beyond the Appalachians.
"Savage"
The Iroquois were a confederacy of Cayuga, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga and Seneca tribes brought together by “prophets” Deganawidah and Hiawatha in 1570. They had a highly developed and democratic political culture with their own constitution.
In 1713 the Treaty of Utrecht, which carved up Spain’s European possessions, declared these remote people “British subjects”.
The colonial rebellion of 1775 divided the Iroquois confederacy and began its decline into oblivion. The Six Nations (the Tuscarora had joined them) fared badly once the American colonials gained their independence and could make a grab for more land.
In 1779 George Washington sent troops under John Sullivan to “lay waste” the Iroquois and destroy their food supply.
The Iroquois were subsequently confined to reservations and their lands absorbed into the US.