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Unrepentant Dakota woman : Angelique Renville and the struggle for Indigenous identity, 1845-1876 / by Linda M. Clemmons.

Van Pelt Library E99.D1 C567 2023
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Clemmons, Linda M., 1969- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Dakota Indians--Biography.
Dakota Indians.
Dakota Indians--Missions--Minnesota.
Dakota Indians--History--19th century.
Dakota Indians--Wars, 1862-1865.
Dakota Indians--Social conditions--19th century.
Frontier and pioneer life--Minnesota.
Frontier and pioneer life.
Frontier and pioneer life--Dakota Territory.
Dakota Indians--Missions.
Dakota Indians--Social conditions.
Renville, Angelique, 1845-1876.
Renville, Angelique.
Riggs, Stephen Return, 1812-1883.
Riggs, Stephen Return.
Riggs, Mary Ann Clark Longley, 1813-1869.
Riggs, Mary Ann Clark Longley.
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions--History--19th century.
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
Minnesota.
United States--Dakota Territory.
Genre:
Biographies
History
Physical Description:
272 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, map ; 24 cm
Other Title:
Angelique Renville and the struggle for Indigenous identity, 1845-1876
Place of Publication:
Pierre : South Dakota Historical Society Press, [2023]
Summary:
"Born in Minnesota in 1845, the daughter of a prominent mixed-ancestry Dakota family, Angelique Renville (1845-1876) learned traditional Dakota ways of life from her relatives while navigating the complex multi-cultural world of the declining fur trade. At age six, along with her younger sister Agnes, she was formally adopted by Protestant missionaries Stephen and Mary Riggs, who did their utmost to erase her Dakota identity and educate her as a 'proper' Christian woman. Despite their best efforts, Angelique remained close with her Dakota kin, especially her mother and siblings. After a frustrating year at a female seminary in Ohio, Angelique worked as a domestic servant for a family friend, ostensibly continuing her education. The outbreak of the U.S.-Dakota War in 1862 and Agnes's subsequent death in a U.S. Army prison camp changed everything. Returning to Minnesota, Angelique turned her back on the missionaries, entered a polygamous marriage with a Dakota man, and moved with her relatives to the Dakota Territory, where she increasingly distanced herself from the Riggs family. In 1869, she took legal action to emancipate herself from the guardianship of Stephen Riggs and to seek legal redress against unscrupulous loan sharks who had illegally sold her lands. It was an extraordinary act for an American Indian woman of the time, and she faced a steep uphill battle in court. Despite her untimely death of tuberculosis in 1876, Angelique Renville lived her final years on her own terms"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Angelique and the Renville family, 1800-1850s
Adoption and schooling, 1851-1861
The Ohio Female College, Fall 1861-Spring 1862
The Drakes, war, and home to Minnesota, September 1863
Dakota Territory: marriage and Christianity, 1863-1876
Dakota Territory: land and guardianship, 1863-1976
Ties that bind.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 249-260) and index.
ISBN:
9781941813485
1941813488
OCLC:
1399970390
Publisher Number:
90100763894

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