Katz’s research does the important job of recognizing the largely forgotten and oftentimes ignored history of Black Indians throughout the development of America. In doing so, he illustrates their significant contributions, honors their sacrifices, and bears witness to their struggles for equality. The history Katz sets forth begins with the earliest American settlements. He tells how in 1526 the Spaniards fled the colony of San Miguel de Gualdape in South Carolina and left their slaves behind. These abandoned Blacks joined with Natives and established a thriving North American colony, which was governed under democratic principles of equality.
When the Europeans economized enslavement in America, Katz makes clear how the Natives embraced runaways and united with them to confront the Spaniards. The greatest fear of the Europeans was the relations between the Blacks and Indians. They created communities that Whites viewed as dangerous and labeled as “maroon.” In fact, the alliance between the Blacks and the Seminoles proved one of the biggest threats to the stability of the South’s institution of slavery.
Katz also brings much needed clarity to the exploration and development of the West. History has refused to mention such facts as the founders of Los Angeles in 1781 were mostly Africans and a mixed race of Blacks and Indians. Additionally, the Europeans relied heavily on Africans to negotiate with Indians during expeditions. Even when Whites forced the Indian nations to carry out slavery, whites despised the Natives’ lenient approach to handling slaves and considered it too mild.
Confederate defeat had many Blacks leaving White society for Indian nations where they had significantly more opportunities to succeed than they ever would have under Whites. By the time of the Oklahoma land rush, Katz explains how Black Indians dreamed of a free state for people of color, but racism and White greed thwarted their efforts. Before and after the Civil War, it was white oppression that drove Natives and Africans to further unite due to their common birthrights, families, communities, and spiritual beliefs.
Katz shows how on the frontier Natives shared much of what they had with Africans, and it was thousands of African Americans who labored as cowboys to help establish the Texas plains. The South merely replaced slavery with segregation and sharecropping, while in the West the Natives faced an unrelenting loss of their land. The Dawes Act of 1887 essentially stated that “savage” Natives needed to submit to white ways, and the act transferred property to whites from the Indians, who the government deemed incapable of taking care of the land. Even when the government used Black troops, known as “buffalo soldiers,” to defeat the Natives, history shows that the Blacks detested persecution of the Indians.
Throughout the history of America, relations and alliances between Indians and Blacks have helped forge the cause of development and the call for equality. Black Indians may not be a comprehensive study, but it is an important book in giving a voice to an entire group of Americans who have been marginalized for too long. The record Katz sets forth corrects many of the misunderstandings of the past and fills in gaps that have been neglected.