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One of the premier chroniclers of our nation's turbulent frontier history, Allan W. Ecker now presents another spellbinding chapter in the conquest of the American wilderness.  Here is the powerful, compellingly human story of the white man's struggle to claim the rich land of the Northern Mississippi--ancestral home of the Fox and Sac tribes--from the legendary war chief Black Hawk.  Having killed his first enemy at sixteen.  This proud, brooding warrior extends a hand in friendship show more to the Spanish and the British, but harbors a lifelong hatred for the Americans, who once burned his home village.  Now charged by the president himself, the ambitious governor of Illinois Territory leads a brave and illustrious group of settlers and soldiers to wrest the beautiful land from a nation of destiny and a noble chieftain fated to be betrayed by his own kind. show less

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2 reviews
Allan W. Eckert is an expert chronicler of America’s turbulent frontier history. He has written a number of books that detail the western expansion and in Twilight of Empire he focuses on the life of War Chief Black Hawk who strove to hold back the white people from claiming the ancestral home of the Fox and Sac tribes. This homeland was the rich land of the northern Mississippi River that was destined to become known as the state of Illinois.

This is a book that I needed to read with two bookmarks, one to mark my reading place and another to allow me to follow the author’s amplification notes at the back of the book. Each event and detail has been painstakingly researched. Every character in this sweeping epic is drawn from actual show more history and their every action actually happened. Twilight of Empire is part of this author’s Winning of America series which I had read all but this book quite a few years ago. I was very happy to have found this book at a second hand store so that I could complete my read of this fascinating series.

Black Hawk was an extraordinary man, he had a life-long hatred for the Americans, who once burned his home village. As settlers and soldiers arrive in this contested land, a savage conflict is ignited. This non-fiction historical read makes for a vivid, exciting and interesting reading experience that is made all the more dramatic by the knowledge that all of this actually happened.
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this is a sad, sad, book. The final flare-up of Indian fighting in the "Old Northwest". We even get to see Abraham Lincoln in a early adventure. Black Hawk and his tribe of Fox and Saux indians are hounded to their eventual destruction by the Indian-War Machine. directed from the east, and having no trouble at all with this small people. After this, there's not much left of Eckert's grand narrative, and we can get ready for the Civil war, if we are looking for thrills. It's a book abut a lost cause. The eventual triumph of William Henry Harrison blows no trumpets for me.
½

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49+ Works 5,619 Members
Allan W. Eckert was born in Buffalo, New York on January 30, 1931. He served in the United States Air Force and attended the University of Dayton and Ohio State University. He was a historian, naturalist, novelist, poet, screenwriter and playwright. He wrote over 40 books during his lifetime including A Time of Terror: The Great Dayton Flood, Wild show more Season, The Silent Sky, The Frontiersmen, Wilderness Empire, The Conquerors, and A Sorrow in Our Heart: The Life of Tecumseh, which were all nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in literature. He received the Newbery Honor Book Award for Incident at Hawk's Hill. He also wrote almost all of the scripts for television's Wild Kingdom and adapted The Frontiersmen into the play Tecumseh! He died of prostate cancer on July 7, 2011 at the age of 80. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Twilight of Empire
Original publication date
1988-10
Epigraph
Her name was Kneebingkememewoin -Summar Rain- and she was a very short woman.
First words
A veritable lexicon of adjectives would have been required to describe the tall and slender man who was so intently engrossed in his writing under the glow of a shiny brass chimney lamp as midnight approached.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Rock River was a beautiful country. I liked my cornfields, and the home of my people. I fought for them.

Classifications

Genre
History
DDC/MDS
977.302History & geographyHistory of North AmericaNorth central United StatesIllinois
LCC
F545 .E24Local History of the United States, Canada and Latin AmericaUnited States local historyIllinois
BISAC

Statistics

Members
167
Popularity
195,372
Reviews
2
Rating
(3.83)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
4
ASINs
2