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Book reviews for "Covington,_James_W." sorted by average review score:
Billy Bowleg's War, 1855-1858
Published in Hardcover by Mickler's Floridiana Inc. (1982)
Amazon base price: $9.95
Average review score:
Good research of a forgotten war.
The Seminoles of Florida
Published in Paperback by University Press of Florida (1993)
Amazon base price: $13.97
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Used price: $6.50
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List price: $19.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $6.50
Buy one from zShops for: $13.87
Average review score:
Some good information, but old-fashioned
This book includes good historical information about the formation of the Seminoles and about the Seminole Wars, but it's not nearly so concerned with who the Seminoles are today. It also contains disturbing, seemingly unaware antiquated terminolgy like "war whoop," "savage," "semi-civilized" and "warpath," makes claims about the practice of scalping that go undocumented in the text, doesn't always distinguish between Maskoki and Mikasuki terms, and has a really odd epilogue. Four useful appendicies. Maybe good historical background, but not so great as a recent history of the Seminoles or as anthropology.
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After the close of the 2nd Seminole War (1835-1842), there were several hundred remaining Seminole and Miccosukee Indians in the Florida Everglades that the United States was not able to remove. The 2nd Seminole War had been the most costly war the United States had fought against its own Native Americans. After seven years, thousands of lives, and tens of millions of dollars, the government decided to let the Florida Indians who remained in the Everglades stay there. During the past ten years 90 percent of the Indians had been either killed or removed from Florida, and it would prove too difficult to remove the last ones.
For 13 years after the end of the 2nd Seminole War, the Indians and the white settlers remained at an uneasy truce. The State of Florida had outlawed all Indians from its borders, but was unable to remove them. Seminole Chief Billy Bowlegs went to extreme measures to keep the peace. When troubles flared up and the threat of another war happened in 1849, Bowlegs went so far as to surrender the offenders among his own people over to the government. But in 1855, the pressure was on again as land surveyors and settlers were closing in on Bowlegs and his people. It was only a matter of time before an incident happened that would set both sides at war again.