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348 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1973
The story of the black people was ignored when historians told of Ponce de Leon, Chief Osceola, Davy Crockett, Billy the Kid, Bat Masterson, Sitting Bull, General Custer and Buffalo Bill. Yet, they are mentioned in explorers’ diaries, government reports, pioneers’ reminiscences and frontier newspapers. They appear in sketches by Charles Russell and Frederic Remington, and in early photographs by professional and amateur cameramen…. Like other Americans, they helped shape our many frontiers.
No phase of our history is more typically American, its heroes more greatly appreciated by young and old than the old West. Celebrated and glorified by movies, novels, TV and textbooks, it has been offered to all as the unique American experience. For black youngsters to truly feel a part of the United States and for white youngsters to see them as part of the nation, the black frontiersmen, settlers, cowboys and cavalrymen must ride across the pages of textbooks just as they rode across the western plains.