In Search of the Racial Frontier: African Americans in the American West 1528-1990

Front Cover
W. W. Norton & Company, May 17, 1999 - History - 415 pages

"An enthralling work that will be essential reading for years to come." —David Nicholson, Washington Post

A landmark history of African Americans in the West, In Search of the Racial Frontier rescues the collective American consciousness from thinking solely of European pioneers when considering the exploration, settling, and conquest of the territory west of the Mississippi. From its surprising discussions of groups of African American wholly absorbed into Native American culture to illustrating how the largely forgotten role of blacks in the West helped contribute to everything from the Brown vs. Board of Education desegregation ruling to the rise of the Black Panther Party, Quintard Taylor fills a major void in American history and reminds us that the African American experience is unlimited by region or social status.

 

Contents

Maps
11
Acknowledgments
13
Introduction
17
1 Spanish Origins 15281848
27
2 Slavery in the Antebellum West 183565
53
3 Freedom in the Antebellum West 183565
81
4 Reconstruction in the West 186575
103
5 Migration and Settlement 18751920
134
7 The Black Urban West 18701910
192
8 The Black Urban West 191140
222
9 World War II and the Postwar Black West 194150
251
10 The Civil Rights Movement in the West 195070
278
Conclusion
311
Notes
317
Bibliography
371
Index
397

6 Buffalo Soldiers in the West 18661917
164

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About the author (1999)

Quintard Taylor is the Scott and Dorothy Bullitt Emeritus Professor of American History at the University of Washington, Seattle and founder of BlackPast.org.