Preston Pfau

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In the early period of American colonization, “there was no reference to a place called Indian country.” That is because every place was Indian country. All attempts to access land in North America began with “the recognition that it belonged to Indians,” Charles Wilkinson writes.2 Settlers in Maine rented land from Indians. In the Dutch and English colonies, settlers purchased land from Indians, either wholesale or piecemeal.
Neither Settler nor Native: The Making and Unmaking of Permanent Minorities
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