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Lincoln's Bishop

A President, A Priest, and the Fate of 300 Dakota Sioux Warriors

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A history of the Dakota War of 1862, an Episcopal bishop, and his campaign to protect the lives of the Dakota Sioux.
It is hard to recall what powerful moral voices Protestant church leaders had in the formative years of the nation. Gustav Niebuhr travels back to the Minnesota frontier of 1862 when Dakota Sioux rose up against pioneering families and slaughtered hundreds. Citizens demanded mass executions and deportations. Into this turmoil stepped Henry Benjamin Whipple, the state's first Episcopal bishop.
Whipple had already loudly decried the crimes and corruption of those managing Indian affairs and warned of calamity. Now he made the case of mercy and a deeper justice, which eventually led to meeting with President Lincoln. Despite being preoccupied with the Civil War, Lincoln was moved to intervene, surprisingly taking the time to review all 303 cases and overturning the death sentence for most of the Indians. Nevertheless, the result was still the largest single execution on American soil.
If not for Whipple's vigorous campaigning, both in state and in Washington, DC, a greater tragedy might well have occurred. His success should haunt us: Where today do we hear these trumpet calls for justice like those given by figures such as Bishop Henry Benjamin Whipple?
"[An] enlightening tale of Abraham Lincoln's other war. . . . A pleasant surprise for the average history buff." —Kirkus Reviews
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    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2014
      Enlightening tale of Abraham Lincoln's other war.In 1862, overshadowed by the Civil War, a dire conflict known as the Dakota War roiled the southern half of Minnesota. Journalist Niebuhr (Newspaper and Online Journalism/Syracuse Univ.; Beyond Tolerance: Searching for Interfaith Understanding in America, 2008) provides an intriguing examination of this chapter in American frontier history, focusing especially on the figure of Henry Benjamin Whipple (1822-1901). A transplant from New York and Illinois, Whipple was the first Episcopal bishop in Minnesota and immediately began crusading on behalf of Native Americans there. "He stated his goal simply: the Indians must be protected from corrupt government agents and rapacious traders, especially those who dealt in liquor and abused women," writes the author. Throughout even the direst moments of the Dakota War and its aftermath, Whipple maintained that maltreatment at the hands of the American government had driven the Dakotas to acts of violence-and in many instances, quite grotesque violence. Niebuhr lays out the precipitant causes of the war-delayed annuities for tribes that had traded in land, leading to hunger and resentment-and chronicles its opening volleys. He also provides a detailed account of the war's major engagements and its effects on white settlement. But the author always comes back to Whipple, seen by many as an Indian sympathizer, who nonetheless had profound influence on policymakers. His triumph was in convincing Lincoln to spare the lives of 275 Dakota captives (others were hanged for wanton brutality during the war). Niebuhr's work sometimes feels choppy, bouncing back and forth chronologically and going over some of the same ground more than once. However, that does not lessen the fact that it provides a service by reintroducing readers to Whipple, an early proponent of minority rights, as well as to the Dakota War.A pleasant surprise for the average history buff.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from June 1, 2014

      The Civil War is often the focus of America's history during the middle of the 19th century, but here Niebuhr (religion and the media, Syracuse Univ.; Beyond Tolerance) explains why this is a mistake. He takes a look at the life of Henry Benjamin Whipple (1822-1901), the first Episcopal Bishop of Minnesota, a man who personally petitioned the president on behalf of the marginalized Dakota Nation. Niebuhr's research was clearly exhaustive, and he approaches history in the context of the region's past as a whole, objectively illuminating Whipple's involvement. An ethical as well as historical journey, this title explores a man's personal faith, ambition, and humanitarianism. This is not merely biography--it is the history of a people and the merging of two civilizations. American history enthusiasts will be dazzled by the author's wealth of information and casual readers will be drawn in by the accessible rhetoric. Niebuhr has created a truly universal work of nonfiction, using an engaging tone and prizing historical accuracy as well as emotional evocation. VERDICT A historical narrative that is as pleasurable to read as it is historically accurate, which is to say, very.--Kathleen Dupre, Edmond, OK

      Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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