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West of the Revolution

Claudio Saunt
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West of the Revolution

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2014

Plot Summary

University of Georgia American History professor Claudio Saunt’s 2014 work West of the Revolution: An Uncommon History of 1776 retells the story of that seemingly well-known year from the perspective of the entire continent of North America. Rather than focusing on the eventually world-changing, but at their time small, events of the thirteen eastern colonies fighting for independence from England, Saunt expands his outlook to encompass the many other conflicts and revolutions happening to the west of this rebellion. Saunt divides his book into nine chapters that chronicle events such as Russia’s conflicts in the Aleutian Islands, the plight of Spanish conquest in California, and the movement of the Sioux and Osage people that shifted power structures in the middle of the continent.

As Saunt points out in the prologue, although most backward-looking histories of the eighteenth century give the American Revolution pride of place, in reality, the British colonies represented less than 4 percent of the total population of North America at the time when they united to break away from colonial rule. Not only that, but a large impetus for the Revolution was King George III’s policy about westward expansion after the French and Indian War ended in 1763. By establishing a dividing line between British and Native American territories, and thus preventing colonial subjects from settling in or acquiring land west of the Appalachian Mountains, the King drove a wedge between the monarchy and its ever wealthier colonial subjects – George Washington, for instance – who were eager to expand their land holdings.

The first chapter focuses on the westernmost part of North America, describing the advancement of the Russian Empire on the Aleutian Islands and points south. In a bid to hunt sea otters prized for their pelts, Russian hunters encroached on Aleutian and Alaskan territory and were promptly killed by islanders. In response, Russia sent the brutal Captain Ivan Solov'ev whose revenge was as gory and vicious as it was effective in wiping out the Aleut people – both through violence and through disease.



The next chapters follow the domino effect of colonization. Because Russia claimed that the Northwest Coast of North America belonged to their empire, Spain felt that its North American holdings were under potential future threat. Pushing north from Mexico, the Spanish established a presidio and mission in San Diego to protect their claim on California. There, the native Kumeyaay Indian communities were decimated by newly arrived European diseases and by the unchecked damage wreaked by European domesticated animals, invasive species to this new environment. At first, the Kumeyaay turned for help to the mission, hoping baptism would assure survival. Soon their dissatisfaction grew unmanageable, and they burned the mission to the ground.

From San Diego, the Spanish continued north. The expedition of Juan Bautista de Anza established contact with the Ohlone people in the San Francisco Bay area. Another party, the Domínguez and Escalante Expedition, tried to locate a route from Santa Fe to Monterey through the San Joaquin Valley. However, all of these travelers were only able to make their way through the new landscape with the help of native people, relying on guides to take them from one community to the next. When Domínguez and Escalante couldn’t find local help, the expedition got lost and hungry and had to turn back. Although unsuccessful, this journey provided maps of the area that were later invaluable.

Saunt addresses the role of the Hudson’s Bay Company, chartered in England to trade fur in Saskatchewan. Its employees were so stymied by the long and challenging winters in the Canadian wilderness, that they were dependent on native people not just for sustaining the fur trade, but also for staying alive. In this encounter, the native people had the upper hand: not only did they know how to survive the climate, but they also had many trading partners besides the British.



Saunt discusses the migration of the Lakota Sioux to the Black Hills of what is now South Dakota – a move so fundamental to this people that the Black Hills are now considered sacred. Partly, this is because of the effort of the Lakota to hold onto their home in the Black Hills a century after they settled them in conflicts made famous by the Battle of the Little Bighorn, also known as Custer's Last Stand.

Next, Saunt tackles the way the Osage people handled the increasing presence of Spain and Britain along the Mississippi River. The Osage dominated this region, ruling over the area between what is now Missouri and Arkansas all the way to the north border of Texas. Because conflict was limited by the Treaty of Paris, which marked the Mississippi River as the dividing line between Spanish and British colonial interests, the Osage profited tremendously from straddling this literal avenue of trade.

The final chapter of the book looks at what happened to the Creeks in the Southeast of the continent. The Creeks held land in what is now Georgia, but were surrounded on all sides by the British – or soon to be Americans. After unsuccessfully trying to build an alliance with Spain to resist the expansion of American settlements, the Creeks became traveling traders, and the book follows them as they seek the markets of urban Havana, Cuba.