Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Prucha was born in River Falls, Wisconsin, the first son of Edward J. and Katharine Prucha and the older brother of John J. Prucha.He graduated from River Falls High School in 1937 as Paul Prucha and was then educated at Wisconsin State Teachers College-River Falls, which awarded him a Bachelor of Science degree in 1941.
Francis Paul Prucha (1921–2015), American Jesuit and historian; Jaroslav Průcha (1898–1963), Czech actor; Jindřich Prucha (1886–1914), Czech landscape painter; Jiří Průcha (born 1955), Czech tennis player; Petr Průcha (born 1982), Czech ice hockey player; Vlasta Průchová (1926–2006), Czech jazz singer
According to historian Francis Paul Prucha, "the Christian crusade against the removal of the Indians died with Evarts." The effect that Evarts's activism for the rights of indigenous peoples had on U.S. foreign policy through his son, William M. Evarts who was Secretary of State during the Hayes administration (1877–1881), is a question for ...
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West is a 1970 non-fiction book by American writer Dee Brown.It explores the history of American expansionism in the American West in the late nineteenth century and its devastating effects on the indigenous peoples living there.
Similarly, historian Francis Paul Prucha argued that removal was the best of the four options that presented themselves, the other three being genocide, assimilation into white culture, and protection of tribal lands against settler encroachment, the last of which Prucha, like Remini, saw as unachievable. [49]
United States Indian Policies, 1815-1860. Francis Paul Prucha. Pages 40–50. United States Indian Policies, 1860-1900. William T. Hagan. Pages 51–65. United States Indian Policies, 1900-1980. Lawrence C. Kelly. Pages 66–80. Canadian Indian Policies. Robert J. Surtees. Pages 81–95. Spanish Indian Policies. Charles Gibson. Pages 96–102.
Marquette University (/ m ɑːr ˈ k ɛ t / ⓘ) is a private Jesuit research university in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States.It was established as Marquette College on August 28, 1881, by John Henni, the first Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. [4]
1987 – Francis Paul Prucha; 1986 – Paul W. Gates; 1985 – No Award Given; 1984 – No Award Given; 1983 – Robert G. Athearn; References