Great Books on the American West (November/December 2004 | Volume: 55, Issue: 6)

Great Books on the American West

AH article image

Authors: Robert M. Utley

Historic Era: Era 4: Expansion and Reform (1801-1861)

Historic Theme:

Subject:

November/December 2004 | Volume 55, Issue 6

Americans have always envisioned a west. When they won independence from England in 1783, the west lay just beyond the Appalachian Mountains, a west celebrated in the adventures of Daniel Boone. Then, people began to thread through the Cumberland Gap to make new homes there. Boone felt crowded, so in 1799, he moved across the Mississippi River to take up residence in Missouri.

Only four years later, President Thomas Jefferson bought Louisiana from Napoleon, and the west suddenly leaped the Missouri River and left Boone behind. Gradually, this west yielded its contours to Lewis and Clark, explorers, mountain men, and covered-wagon emigrants. Its boundaries expanded as the war with Mexico and diplomacy with England transformed the United States into a continental nation. By mid-century, popularized by the California gold rush, a geographical west had fixed itself in the American mind: the plains, mountains, deserts, and plateaus that separated the Missouri River from the Pacific shore.

Geographically, the west endured unchanged in American perceptions. Historically, it sprawled into two overlapping wests—the Real West and the Mythic West. The people who gave life to this vast and varied expanse of geography were real, and historians argue endlessly over exactly who they were, what they did, and why. For the broader public, however, these people also take on fantastic qualities that unite the Real West and the Mythic West. Buffalo Bill, Annie Oakley, George Armstrong Custer, Crazy Horse, and others have ascended to immortal legendry. But another dimension is the painters, illustrators, and writers who cast both landscape and people in a romanticism that began to color the public image early in the 19th century. Perhaps no other geographic region merges the real and the mythic in such vivid combination. Both fact and fantasy make up the history of the American west.

These people, whatever their mythic content, won the west. But the other half of the story is of the people who lost the west. From Atlantic to Pacific, every west was already inhabited when the first invaders arrived. Indian tribes (sometimes fashionably labeled Native Americans) confronted the newcomers in peace and war, in friendship and hostility, in co-existence, in commerce, in diplomacy, and in a host of other relationships. Unlike the intruders, they recognized no geographical west, only the ever-shifting edges of their tribal domain. For the non-Indian public, however, they are vital players in the history of the west. And, in the popular mind, they, too, are both real and mythic and varying combinations of the two.

The history of the west is not only human. It also embraces what humans did to the vast region. All, whether resident or invader, historic or prehistoric, imposed constant change on the land and its water, its flora and its fauna. The hugely varied ways of life of humans, from hunters of mastodons to miners, loggers, farmers, dam-builders, and others of more recent times, transformed the Real West and even the Mythic West.

For the general reader who would learn