American
History Imprints is pleased to announce the publication of
1609: A Country That Was Never Lost
The 400th Anniversary of Henry Hudson's Visit with North Americans of the Middle Atlantic Coast by Kevin W. Wright, historian
Profit in silk and spices
lured them into Arctic straits, but the chilling reality of the Little Ice Age
blocked their passage. Therefore, Henry Hudson and his mutinous crew turned
westward armed with vague charts and supposed sightings of the Indian Ocean across a narrow sandy isthmus. Upon their
arrival, crowds of curious Manhattans greeted them in canoes made from tree
trunks. Dressed in animal skins and mantles woven of turkey feathers, they
offered corn, beans, oysters, tobacco, hemp, grapes and pumpkins in trade for
cloth, metal tools and trinkets.
Mining contemporary
sources, historian Kevin W. Wright has carefully reconstructed the native world
that Henry Hudson encountered during his fateful voyage of 1609. In so doing,
he dispels the fog of nineteenth and twentieth century myths to rediscover the
North Americans of the Middle
Atlantic Coast.
Describing their original homelands and culture in great detail, he brings the
panorama of culturally diverse native societies to life. These were truly the
First Americans, inclined to live “almost all equally free.” Could their
natural democracy lie at the heart of the American spirit?
The Hudson Quadricentennial
marks the birth of the Dutch colony of New Netherland upon the Hudson
and Delaware Rivers and the dawn of history for Delaware,
New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
New York and Connecticut. But as early as 1656, Dutch commentator Adriæn van der Donck wondered
how Christopher Columbus or Amerigo Vespucci could have discovered “a country
that was never lost?” Through these pages readers step back in time for a visit
with ancient Algonquian and Iroquoian communities of Native Americans,
including the original Manhattans, the Minisinks of Bachom’s Country, the
Lenape of the Schuylkill estuary, the Mahicans, Susquehannocks, Mohawks and
others whose names have been lost in the mists of time.
1609: A
Country That Was Never Lost includes a comprehensive bibliography,
extensive endnotes, and a complete index. It is destined to become a classic
resource for anyone who enjoys Native American culture and history, especially
in the New Jersey and New York areas.
Format: 6” x 9” perfect bound paperback Pages: 284 including introduction, acknowledgments, bibliography, endnotes, and index Illustrations: 88 historical and contemporary images, photographs and line drawings ISBN 10:
0-9842256-1-7 ISBN 13:
978-0-9842256-1-7 LCCN:
2009936060 |