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9780295754512 Academic Inspection Copy

Unsettled Ground

The Whitman Massacre and Its Shifting Legacy in the American West
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"By turns moving, evenhanded and lyrical in its evocation of time and place."-- Seattle Times In this rigorously researched and incisively written account, historian and journalist Cassandra Tate challenges generations of received wisdom about the 1847 killing of Marcus and Narcissa Whitman and eleven others at their Presbyterian mission on Cayuse land near present-day Walla Walla. Far from a simple story of martyrdom and savagery, the Whitman incident emerges here as a cultural collision steeped in misunderstanding, religious idealism, and colonial arrogance. Tate deftly navigates the evolving narratives that have surrounded the event--from nineteenth-century sanctification to twentieth-century critique--revealing how shifting social values have shaped public memory. With nuance and clarity, she illuminates voices long suppressed, particularly those of the Cayuse, whose perspectives refract the complexities of resistance, sovereignty, and survival. Tate's portrait of the Whitmans is neither hagiography nor vilification. Instead, it captures them as earnest but flawed agents of Manifest Destiny, shaped as much by their cultural assumptions as by their religious convictions. Through fresh archival research and a deep sensitivity to context, Unsettled Ground unpacks the politics of commemoration and historical narrative, offering a compelling, unvarnished retelling that is as relevant as it is revelatory. This is essential reading for anyone interested in the contested ground of Western history.
Cassandra Tate (1945-2021) worked as a journalist for twenty-five years before earning a PhD in history at the University of Washington. A former Nieman Fellow at Harvard University, she was author of Cigarette Wars: The Triumph of "the Little White Slaver."
"[Tate] writes with a flair and transparency unusual in such a meticulously researched book. . . . By turns moving, evenhanded and lyrical in its evocation of time and place." -- "Seattle Times" "A highly readable, myth-busting, fact-based story. . . . [A] tale for all who love the West, its history and its truths." -- "The Inlander" "Balanced and deeply researched." -- "Cascade PBS" "Tate combines her training as a journalist, historian, and storyteller to dig deep. . . . Her writing is engaging, and readers, even those very familiar with the activities of Marcus and Narcissa Whitman, will find much that is new." -- "Pacific Northwest Quarterly"
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