At the dawn of the 1700s the Natchez viewed the first
Francophones in the Lower Mississippi Valley as potential inductees
to their chiefdom. This mistaken perception lulled them into
permitting these outsiders to settle among them. Within two decades
conditions in Natchez Country had taken a turn for the worse. The
trickle of wayfarers had given way to a torrent of colonists (and
their enslaved Africans) who refused to recognize the Natchez’s
hierarchy. These newcomers threatened to seize key
authority-generating features of Natchez Country: mounds, a plaza,
and a temple. This threat inspired these Indians to turn to a
recent import—racial categories—to reestablish social order. They
began to call themselves “red men” to reunite their polity and to
distance themselves from the “blacks” and “whites” into which their
neighbors divided themselves. After refashioning their identity,
they launched an attack that destroyed the nearby colonial
settlements. Their 1729 assault began a two-year war that resulted
in the death or enslavement of most of the Natchez people.
In Natchez Country, George Edward Milne provides the most
comprehensive history of the Lower Mississippi Valley and the
Natchez to date. From La Salle’s first encounter with what would
become Louisiana to the ultimate dispersal of the Natchez by the
close of the 1730s, Milne also analyzes the ways in which French
attitudes about race and slavery influenced native North American
Indians in the vicinity of French colonial settlements on the
Mississippi River and how Native Americans in turn adopted and
resisted colonial ideology.