Imatge de l'autor

Juliette M. Kinzie (1806–1870)

Autor/a de Wau-Bun: The "Early Day" in the Northwest

4 obres 71 Membres 3 Ressenyes

Sobre l'autor

Crèdit de la imatge: public domain

Obres de Juliette M. Kinzie

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Nom oficial
Kinzie, Juliette Augusta Magill
Altres noms
Kinzie, Mrs. John H.
Data de naixement
1806-09-11
Data de defunció
1870-09-15
Gènere
female
Nacionalitat
USA
Lloc de naixement
Middletown, Connecticut, USA
Lloc de defunció
Amagansett, New York, USA
Llocs de residència
Fort Winnebago, Wisconsin
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Professions
historian
memoirist
writer
novelist
Relacions
Low, Juliette Gordon (granddaughter)
Biografia breu
Juliette Augusta Magill was born in Middletown, Connecticut to a family descended from statesmen and businessmen dating back to the founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. When she was 14, the family moved to New York State. She was tutored in Latin and other languages by her mother and uncle, and briefly attended boarding school in New Haven, Connecticut, and Emma Willard's school in Troy, New York. In 1830, she married John H. Kinzie, a fur trader, and moved with him to Detroit. Together they traveled by boat to Fort Winnebago, in the area that is now Wisconsin, which guarded the portage between the Fox and Wisconsin rivers. Her husband was assigned by the U.S. government as an agent to the Winnebago people. They lived there three years and had the first of their seven children. After the treaty ending the Sauk War of 1832 forced the Winnebago to move west of the Mississippi River, the Kinzies moved to Chicago, Illinois, where his family owned a tract of land bordering the Chicago River and Lake Michigan. Juliette Kinzie became active in charitable and church activities, including helping to found St. Luke's Hospital and the Chicago Historical Society. In 1844, she published her first book, Narrative of the Massacre at Chicago, August 15, 1812, and of Some Preceding Events. Her second book Wau-Bun: The "Early Day" in the North West (1856), recounted her experiences at Fort Winnebago as well as those of her mother-in-law and other relatives during the Black Hawk War. Both books were unusual for their day in being sympathetic to Native Americans displaced by white settlers. In 1869, she published a novel, Walter Ogilby. These works and her letters and journals provide acute and valuable observations of life on the American frontier and the establishment of the city of Chicago. Her namesake granddaughter Juliette Gordon Low became the founder of the Girl Scouts of America in 1912.

Membres

Ressenyes

Originally published in 1851, WAU-BUN opens with Juliette Kenzie's lovely hand-drawn maps.

WAU-BUN translates in Ojibwa to "the dawn - the break of day"
and is a definite metaphor for the lives of Juliette and her husband, the newly appointed agent
for The Old Indian Agency House in Portage, Wisconsin.

There was no way to anticipate the changes and dangerous challenges that dominated their new existence
during the years 1830-1833 at Fort Winnebago. Juliette's evocative landscape drawings illuminate their historical passage.

Though the Kenzies express honest and almost total understanding of the horror of all the Indian land being forever stolen,
they are also, in their Christian way, condescending and superior to the Indians. Slavery is not a major concern.

Readers may hope that her husband finally has the courage to simply not join Juliette's latest travel caprices and guides her
to listen to more experienced and wiser travelers.

Her account of the Massacre at Chicago was horrifying and unexpected.
… (més)
½
 
Marcat
m.belljackson | Hi ha 2 ressenyes més | Feb 10, 2020 |
Mrs. Kinzie (Juliette) was the wife of an Indian Agent to the Winnebagos in the early 1830s. She was a meticulous observer of frontier life in the upper mid-west. Providing great detail about the as yet undeveloped land, the natives and frontiersmen, their clothing, behavior and attire--she paints an excellent portrait of life and the perils of overland travel. Not entirely an unbiased observer, the introduction to this edition spells out that she left out, altered or lied about events that would have been considered indelicate or which might have damaged her family name. She presents herself as the finest thing in shoe leather on that side of the Mississippi. Her commentary is rife with all the arrogance and prejudices of the age to which she was completely oblivious. She was absolutely convinced of her own and her husband's superiority and that they were doing what was best for the Indians and the country. I would have like to have picked her up and shaken her for all the good it would have done. Her description, based on the remembrances of family and friends of the massacre at Ft. Dearborn in 1812, was particularly harrowing.… (més)
1 vota
Marcat
varielle | Hi ha 2 ressenyes més | Feb 10, 2017 |
Where I got the book: free on Kindle.

This is the real deal; a woman who lived on what was then the Western frontier telling it how it was. And making it all sound perfectly normal. Hostile tribes, swarms of mosquitos, dangerous journeys, injury and illness? No prob. Husband away for months? Near starvation? We can hack it.

Reading this short book really made me appreciate the spirit that built America. This was back when Chicago was a collection of huts (she describes, at one point, how they invited all five single men in Chicago to a party) and includes Mrs. Kinzie's transcription of an eyewitness account of the Fort Dearborn massacre.

I don't know whether to be surprised at how much sympathy Mrs. Kinzie has for the Native Americans. She understands precisely why they have reason not to love the white men, and sees that their land and traditions are being stolen away from them. At the same time, she has a paternalistic attitude toward them, seeing them as "our children" and thus evidently not capable of managing by themselves. I suspect this dual attitude was typical of the settlers of the time.

I would heartily recommend this book to anyone interested in the early history of America outside its original colonies. Fascinating.
… (més)
 
Marcat
JaneSteen | Hi ha 2 ressenyes més | Sep 22, 2013 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
4
Membres
71
Popularitat
#245,552
Valoració
½ 3.7
Ressenyes
3
ISBN
16

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