Joseph P. Alessi teaches history at Youngstown State University. A retired US Army lieutenant colonel, he earned an MA and PhD in history from St. Louis University. He has taught at the United States Military Academy, Washington University in St. Louis, and the University of Pittsburgh. He is a contributor to Studies of Changing Societies, The International Encyclopedia of Military History, TheEncyclopedia of American Indian Wars, and Treaties with American Indians: An Encyclopedia of Rights, Conflicts, and Sovereignty.
""The importance of Indian peoples to the development of the frontier is perhaps not as undervalued as Alessi contends, but under his examination their unmistakable importance is made clear. Despite that, it is both ironic and tragic that Native American assistance proved so crucial to the success of the Euroamerican urban centers that become the epicenters from which Indian expulsion would emanate. The familiar realization that Indian people would not reap the benefits of frontier development lies at the end of Alessi's analysis, yet it does not diminish their important place in the shared world of the early American frontier. Alessi has done an admirable job centering Indian contributions in this synthesis, which should prove valuable for both scholarly and popular audiences.""--Journal of American History ""Alessi argues that pre-European population centers in North America ultimately supported the development of later urban centers. In a transcontinental view, he identifies such locales as fundamental to the expansion of colonial urban locations. In ways reminiscent of historian H. E. Bolton's thesis regarding the importance of studying the US within the broader history of the Americas, the author surveys the expanse of Native American settlements. This volume would be suitable for an advanced undergraduate seminar. Recommended for all libraries with strong collections in Native American studies and graduate programs in American history.""--Choice