Lost Missions: American Indians, Religion, and Shifting Landscapes of Memory: Public History in Historical Perspective
Autor Dr. Sean T Jacobsonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 noi 2026
During the Early Republic and Jacksonian eras, Euro-American colonists and Native nations in the South and Old Northwest established mission schools intended to Christianize Indigenous peoples. In Lost Missions, Sean T. Jacobson recovers the histories and afterlives of these institutions, arguing that they played a far more consequential role in Native–settler relations than scholars have previously acknowledged. Mission schools advanced a spiritual vision of a multiethnic Christian America—one that ultimately collapsed amid the federally sponsored Indian Removal campaigns of the 1830s and 1840s.
Following the closure of these schools, their physical and symbolic landscapes became powerful sites of memory. Euro-American Christians later transformed former missions into commemorative spaces that celebrated “frontier” piety and national expansion. Through monuments, pageantry, and local histories, Protestant and Catholic Americans alike recast missionary labor as a foundational component of American nation-building. In doing so, these narratives framed the Christianization of Native peoples as a benevolent civilizing project, one that implicitly—and sometimes explicitly—sanitized the coercion, dispossession, and violence that accompanied westward expansion and the forced removal of Indigenous nations.
By the late twentieth century, however, these commemorative narratives faded. Suburban development, commercialization, and shifting cultural priorities rendered many mission sites once again “lost,” stripped of the civic meaning they once held. Yet Jacobson shows that these landscapes still speak, especially when viewed from Indigenous perspectives. Reinterpreted through Native histories of endurance and survival, former missions reveal counternarratives of persistence amid profound loss. As tribal nations increasingly engage with these sites today, Lost Missions probes their contested status as places of memory and conscience, illuminating how public history continues to shape and challenge understandings of America’s colonial past.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781625349729
ISBN-10: 1625349726
Pagini: 264
Ilustrații: 15 illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria Public History in Historical Perspective
ISBN-10: 1625349726
Pagini: 264
Ilustrații: 15 illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria Public History in Historical Perspective
Notă biografică
SEAN T. JACOBSON is an assistant professor of history at the University of North Alabama.
Cuprins
List of Figures and Maps
Preface
Notes on Terminology
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Unsettling Histories: The Challenge of Remembering Indian "Civilization" Institutions
1. The Creation of Missionscapes and the Ethnic Cleansing of the Old West
2. The Dispersal of Missionscapes During Removal
3. Rediscovering Lost Missions in the Great Lakes
4. Historical Retrieval and Revisionism at Southern Missionscapes
5. Twentieth Century Modernity, Changing Landscapes, and the Transience of Memory
6. Native Resurgence in Great Lakes Memoryscapes
7. Are These Sites Worth Saving? Ongoing Limitations in Revitalizing Lost Missions
Notes
Index
Preface
Notes on Terminology
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Unsettling Histories: The Challenge of Remembering Indian "Civilization" Institutions
1. The Creation of Missionscapes and the Ethnic Cleansing of the Old West
2. The Dispersal of Missionscapes During Removal
3. Rediscovering Lost Missions in the Great Lakes
4. Historical Retrieval and Revisionism at Southern Missionscapes
5. Twentieth Century Modernity, Changing Landscapes, and the Transience of Memory
6. Native Resurgence in Great Lakes Memoryscapes
7. Are These Sites Worth Saving? Ongoing Limitations in Revitalizing Lost Missions
Notes
Index
Recenzii
“Lost Missions combines deep historical research with public history methods and theory to create an impressive study of missions and how they have been used and remembered. The book will be of interest to students of public history as well as Native American Studies.”—Philip Levy, editor (with Leah Glaser) of Branching Out: The Public History of Trees and author of the James Deetz Book Prize winning The Permanent Resident: Excavations and Explorations of George Washington's Life
“Part history, part historiography, and part critique of current local interpretation, Lost Missions is a true achievement of historical research.”—Lisa Blee, author (with Jean M. O’Brien) of Monumental Mobility: The Memory Work of Massasoit and Framing Chief Leschi: Narratives and the Politics of Historical Justice
“Part history, part historiography, and part critique of current local interpretation, Lost Missions is a true achievement of historical research.”—Lisa Blee, author (with Jean M. O’Brien) of Monumental Mobility: The Memory Work of Massasoit and Framing Chief Leschi: Narratives and the Politics of Historical Justice