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(Dis)armed friendship: impacts of colonial ideology on early Quaker attitudes toward American Indians
Authors:Barbara Heather  Marianne O. Nielsen
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology, MacEwan University, Edmonton, Canadabmheather@shaw.ca;3. Criminology and Criminal Justice, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, USA
Abstract:Quakers’ early relations with American Indians (especially the Lenne Lenape, later known as the Delaware Indians) were generally positive. Core Quaker principles were simplicity, integrity, equality and peace – principles that could coincide well with those of the similarly egalitarian Lenne Lenape, who had been designated peacekeepers by the Iroquois Confederacy. Although the relationship was different than that of other settlers and American Indians, it was still suffused with colonial ideology. From the founding of Pennsylvania to the period of Grant’s ‘Peace Policy’, Quakers had to negotiate two wars and changing attitudes to North American Indians by American Presidents and government. The paper focuses on corresponding shifts in Quaker attitudes and policies. Our interest is in Quaker responses to Native Americans over time, finding that Quakers became increasingly distanced from the Indians and focused on acculturation. In their zeal to become acceptable to American Governments and through that, assist Native Americans, Quakers had, in fact, assimilated themselves.
Keywords:Quakers  North American Indians  colonialism  acculturation  assimilation
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