To Marry an Indian: The Marriage of Harriett Gold and Elias Boudinot in Letters, 1823-1839

Front Cover
Theresa Strouth Gaul
Univ of North Carolina Press, Mar 8, 2006 - Literary Collections - 240 pages
When nineteen-year-old Harriett Gold, from a prominent white family in Cornwall, Connecticut, announced in 1825 her intention to marry a Cherokee man, her shocked family initiated a spirited correspondence debating her decision to marry an Indian. Eventually, Gold's family members reconciled themselves to her wishes, and she married Elias Boudinot in 1826. After the marriage, she returned with Boudinot to the Cherokee Nation, where he went on to become a controversial political figure and editor of the first Native American newspaper.

Providing rare firsthand documentation of race relations in the early nineteenth-century United States, this volume collects the Gold family correspondence during the engagement period as well as letters the young couple sent to the family describing their experiences in New Echota (capital of the Cherokee Nation) during the years prior to the Cherokee Removal. In an introduction providing historical and social contexts, Theresa Strouth Gaul offers a literary reading of the correspondence, highlighting the value of the epistolary form and the gender and racial dynamics of the exchange. As Gaul demonstrates, the correspondence provides a factual accompaniment to the many fictionalized accounts of contacts between Native Americans and Euroamericans and supports an increasing recognition that letters form an important category of literature.

From inside the book

Contents

Introduction
1
Connecticut Letters 18231826
77
Illustrations
145
Cherokee Letters 18271839
151
Works Cited
205
Index
215
Copyright

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Page 127 - Our dearest joys and nearest friends, The partners of our blood, How they divide our wav'ring minds, And leave but half for God! The fondness of a creature's love, How strong it strikes the sense! Thither the warm affections move, Nor can we call them thence.
Page 101 - then shall there enlargement and deliverance arise to the Jews from another place; but thou and thy father's house shall be destroyed.
Page 190 - The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away, and blessed be the name of the Lord.
Page 102 - In memory of HENRY OBOOKIAH, a native of OWYHEE. His arrival in this country gave rise to the Foreign Mission School, of which he was a worthy member. He was once an Idolater, and was designed for a Pagan Priest; but by the grace of god, and by the prayers and
Page 6 - [t]he principal of the school told me that Kalle-ga-nah had gone through a course of history, geography, and surveying, had read some books of Virgil, and was then engaged in studying Enfield's Philosophy; over which, indeed, I afterwards found him when I visited the school. I also saw his trigonometrical copy-books
Page 52 - lots one acre each—a spring called the public spring about twice as large as our sawmill brook, near the center, with other springs on the plat; six new framed houses in sight, besides a Council House, Court House, printing office and four stores, all in sight of Mr. Boudinot's house.. .. The stores
Page 97 - They are those with which I was wounded in the house of my friends.
Page 52 - They have two or three barrels of flour on hand at once. This neighborhood is truly an interesting and pleasant place; the ground is level and smooth as a house floor, the center of the Nation—a new place laid out in city
Page 102 - of pious friends, he became a Christian. He was eminent for piety and missionary zeal. When almost prepared to return to his native Isle, to preach the Gospel, God took him to himself. In his last sickness he wept and prayed for Owyhee, but was submissive. He died without fear, with a heavenly smile on his countenance and glory in his soul, Feb. 17, 1818, Aged 26.
Page 43 - perfection of any person I ever knew. She was the youngest of fourteen children; the others all married except two brothers. One brother was a Congregational Minister. Her sisters all married in high rank; some rich, one a Cong. Minister, one a lawyer, another a Judge, &c. All had married so well that it was a dreadful stroke to have

About the author (2006)

Theresa Strouth Gaul is associate professor of English at Texas Christian University.

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