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Whoop-up country; the Canadian-American West, 1865-1885

par Paul F. Sharp, Paul Frederick Sharp (Auteur)

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Whoop-up Country was first published in 1955. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. In the frontier days before the railroads penetrated the western plains, the Whoop-Up Trail was a high road of adventure and commerce. It led Indians, traders, and cattlemen into a great interior market stretching northward from the Missouri River in Montana to the Bow River valley in the Canadian province of Alberta. From Fort Benton on the Great Muddy to Fort Macleod on the Oldman, the trail with the rowdy name wrote its history in whisky, guns, furs, and pioneer enterprise. But, as the Whoop-Up Trail faded away with the passing of the western frontier, people forgot about its existence and its part in the building of the West. Historians have largely overlooked this colorful chapter in the story of westward migration. Now Paul Sharp tells about the Whoop-Up country in vivid detail. By first describing the region geographically, he demonstrates an important pointthat there was no natural boundary in this area between Canada and the United States. He then relates the economic, social, and political events that ultimately divided the territory between the two nations in fact as well as in name. The volume contains an excellent account of the beginnings of the Northwest Mounted Police. It provides a fresh viewpoint on the Indian problem by considering it impartially and as a whole, without the restricting and artificial limitations of national boundaries. Told by a perceptive and forceful writer, this is the story of the creation of two societiesCanadian and Americanformed under similar circumstances yet developing very different political and cultural identities.… (plus d'informations)
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Whoop-up country is the area of North America the includes most of Montana, the northern portion of Idaho, and much of the southern portions of the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan. Benton, Montana was a "boom town" and gateway to Whoop-up country on the Whoop-up Trail which leads northwest to Fort Macleod, Alberta, Canada.

The book covers life in the region during days of the wild west from 1865 to 1885. Fur traders, Blackfeet, cowboys, sheepherders, farmers, merchants, thieves, the establishment of the Northwest Mounted Police, and then some all are discussed. The political roles of the British, US, and Canadian governments are evenhandedly described, particularly as to how they worked to solve the problem presented by Sitting Bull and his warriors who were on the run from defeating General Custer.

A well-researched book which reflects good scholarship. In addition, I found it entertaining to read.

A number of photos and maps enhance the book. Indexed. ( )
  SCRH | Oct 24, 2008 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Paul F. Sharpauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Sharp, Paul FrederickAuteurauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé

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Whoop-up Country was first published in 1955. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. In the frontier days before the railroads penetrated the western plains, the Whoop-Up Trail was a high road of adventure and commerce. It led Indians, traders, and cattlemen into a great interior market stretching northward from the Missouri River in Montana to the Bow River valley in the Canadian province of Alberta. From Fort Benton on the Great Muddy to Fort Macleod on the Oldman, the trail with the rowdy name wrote its history in whisky, guns, furs, and pioneer enterprise. But, as the Whoop-Up Trail faded away with the passing of the western frontier, people forgot about its existence and its part in the building of the West. Historians have largely overlooked this colorful chapter in the story of westward migration. Now Paul Sharp tells about the Whoop-Up country in vivid detail. By first describing the region geographically, he demonstrates an important pointthat there was no natural boundary in this area between Canada and the United States. He then relates the economic, social, and political events that ultimately divided the territory between the two nations in fact as well as in name. The volume contains an excellent account of the beginnings of the Northwest Mounted Police. It provides a fresh viewpoint on the Indian problem by considering it impartially and as a whole, without the restricting and artificial limitations of national boundaries. Told by a perceptive and forceful writer, this is the story of the creation of two societiesCanadian and Americanformed under similar circumstances yet developing very different political and cultural identities.

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