Description
Book SynopsisAn exploration of the complex relationships between Freemasonry and Native American Indians over the past three hundred years.
Trade Review"This elegantly written book has much to recommend it. It is meticulously documented and is based on archival and secondary sources housed in major Masonic libraries in cities on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. The book serves as a metric for studies of Native Americans and of other minority groups who have participated in Freemasonry. . . . [
Native American Freemasonry] breaks new ground and should be read by both historians and general readers."—R. William Weisberger,
Journal of American History “Thoughtful and sophisticated.”—Alan Garrison,
Pacific Historical Review “Offers many clarifications and revelations about a previously unexplored aspect of Native American history and Freemasonry. It belongs in all university and public libraries.”—Emily E. Auger,
Canadian Journal of Native Studies "Joy Porter's book on freemasonry among American Indians deepens our understanding of how an institution once seen solely as elitist and secret could be used to give meaning to native American spiritual beliefs and social activism. It joins a growing scholarly literature that is changing the way we view freemasonry as well as our understanding of Indian Americans. A triumph of scholarship!"—Margaret C. Jacob, distinguished professor of history, UCLA
"
Native American Freemasonry provides an important insight into how Native and European Americans made use of Masonic space for mutual recognition, acceptance, and cultural exchange and how popular notions of "Nativeness" were exploited within the context of American fraternalism."—Bro. Robert Blackburn,
Rising PointTable of ContentsList of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
A Note on Terms
1. Approaching Native American Freemasonry, Part One
2. Approaching Native American Freemasonry, Part Two
3. A History of Freemasonry: From Europe to the United States
4. Freemasonry as Ornamentalism: Class, Race, and Social Hierarchy
5. The Attractions of Freemasonry to Indians and Others, Part One
6. The Attractions of Freemasonry to Indians and Others, Part Two
7. Native American Freemasons: The Revolutionary Era
8. Native American Freemasons: The "Settlement" of the West and the Civil War Era
9. Native American Freemasons: The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
10. On Television's Deathblow to Fraternalism: Understanding Associationalism and the Declining Role of Fraternalism in American Life
Notes
Bibliography
Index