Elliott West

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Elliott West


Born
in The United States
April 19, 1945

Website

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A specialist in the history of the American West, Elliott West is Alumni Distinguished Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Arkansas. He received his B.A. from the University of Texas (1967) and his Ph.D. from the University of Colorado (1971). He joined the U of A faculty in 1979. Two of his books, Growing Up With the Country: Childhood on the Far-Western Frontier (1989) and The Way to the West: Essays on the Central Plains (1995) received the Western Heritage Award. The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado (1998) received five awards including the Francis Parkman Prize and PEN Center Award. His most recent book is The Last Indian War: The Nez Perce Story (2009).

In 1995 West was awarded the U of A
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Average rating: 4.11 · 1,464 ratings · 189 reviews · 17 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Last Indian War: The Ne...

4.16 avg rating — 571 ratings — published 2009 — 12 editions
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The Contested Plains: India...

3.93 avg rating — 402 ratings — published 1998 — 6 editions
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Continental Reckoning: The ...

4.31 avg rating — 295 ratings — published 2023 — 8 editions
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Growing Up with the Country...

4.10 avg rating — 48 ratings — published 1989 — 4 editions
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The Essential West: Collect...

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4.19 avg rating — 47 ratings — published 2012 — 6 editions
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The Way to the West: Essays...

3.83 avg rating — 36 ratings — published 1995 — 4 editions
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The Saloon on the Rocky Mou...

4.13 avg rating — 23 ratings — published 1979 — 2 editions
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Small Worlds: Children and ...

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3.83 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 1992 — 4 editions
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Trail of Tears: National Hi...

4.29 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 1999 — 2 editions
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Sand Creek: Battle or Massa...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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More books by Elliott West…
Quotes by Elliott West  (?)
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“In Wright Morris's novel Plains Song, the narrator asks, "Is the past a story we are persuaded to believe, in the teeth of the life we endure in the present?" The question is always open. How we treat our world and each other grows from our vision of how we have come to where we are. Ultimately, of course, the issue is not survival but decency and common sense. Everything passes, the psalmist reminds us. No one escapes. The best we can hope is to learn a little from the speaking dead, to find in our deep past some help in acting wisely in the teeth of life.”
Elliott West, The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers, and the Rush to Colorado

“Consider this oddly neglected fact: the West was acquired, conquested, and largely consolidated into the nation coincident with the greatest breakthrough in the history of human communication. The breakthrough was the telegraph. The great advances that followed it, the telephone, radio, television, and the Internet, were all elaborations on its essential contribution. The telegraph separated the person from the message. Before it, with a few exceptions such as a sephamore and carrier pigeons, information moved only as fast as people did. By the nineteenth century, people were certainly moving a lot faster, and indeed a second revolution, that of transportation, was equally critical in creating the West, but before the telegraph a message still had to move with a person, either as a document or in somebody’s head. The telegraph liberated information. Now it could travel virtually at the speed of light. The railroad carried people and things, including letters, ten to fifteen times faster than the next most rapid form of movement. The telegraph accelerated communication more than forty million times. A single dot of Morse code traveled from Kansas City to Denver faster than the click it produced moved from the receiver to the telegrapher’s eardrum.”
Elliott West, The Essential West: Collected Essays

“In 1849 about five thousand persons followed the Gila River route to Santa Fe and then across the southwestern deserts to Southern California, but most crossed by the Platte River route.39 From various towns along the Missouri River they converged on the Platte in what is now east central Nebraska and moved along the south bank before ascending the river’s north fork to the continental divide at South Pass, a broad saddle between the northern and middle Rocky Mountains. Some would then branch off to the northwest to Oregon, while the California-bound would take a southwesterly route across the Great Basin, following the Humboldt River until it sank into the earth and then crossing forty miles of desert before ascending the Truckee and Carson Rivers to the Sierra Nevada. Unlike the Rockies, the Sierra had no easy gateway. In the journey’s final and most difficult stage immigrants urged their spent oxen over Donner or Roller Pass before laboring down the western side.”
Elliott West, Continental Reckoning: The American West in the Age of Expansion

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