Cry of the Tomahawk

by James Miller


Formats

Softcover
$30.95
Softcover
$30.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 7/11/2007

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 522
ISBN : 9780595453009

About the Book

The Wyoming Valley of Pennsylvania is an area rich in history, none of which is more fascinating than in its origin. Settled not by the people of Pennsylvania, but rather of Connecticut due to conflicting land grants, it produced a titanic struggle between the Yankee settlers and Indians, British, Tories, and Pennamites, which stretched from the French and Indian War to well past the Revolutionary War. In these years many battles were fought, much blood was spilled; some say no area in America suffered more in proportion to population. Brother did turn against brother, and father did turn against son. Still, the settler stood fast, possessed by a spirit which in turn would conquer the American west. The Wyoming Valley did not sit on the fringes of the frontier but some sixty miles beyond it. These early pioneers carved out a settlement in the heart of a wilderness staunchly contested by people on all sides. Not only did they have to contend with the Indian threat, but with Pennsylvanians wishing to rid their northern borders of the Yankee intruders, and latter on when their firm support of the revolution became known, with the British Empire. Burned out, attacked from all sides, racked with betrayal from within their own numbers they stood fast in the face of impossible odds. Their spirit is a testament to the indomitable spirit of America. Their story is one of America.

Read and discover within their struggle against the scalping knife and British Empire a great story, one that should never be forgotten, one that defines the American spirit.


About the Author

James Miller is a member of the Twenty-fourth Connecticut Militia Regiment, a living history reenactment group of the American Revolution.

Living near the northern most settlement of the Wyoming Valley, Tioga Point, which was latter renamed Athens at Rome, Pennsylvania, he has scoured all the local libraries and historical societies, finding his own rich heritage of the men and women whom struggled along the Susquehanna to carve their homes out of the untamed wilderness. He has traced a long line of descendents back to that time, a time of turmoil, revolution, civil war, and strife. None more of which he is more proud than his ancestry in the Oneida Indian Tribe. The blood of his ancestors flowed on both sides in the terrific struggle of cultures on the frontier.

In this, he discovered a great story, one which he hopes the reader shall share with an equal fascination, for the great story of the early Wyoming Valley should never be forgotten and he hopes this novel does justice to their great, but overlooked history.