Could be the PR person who wrote this--it came from a press release--didn't know much about US history and garbled what a source told him or her. Could be the source said something like this: "The story is set in the northwest territories--specifically in California."
What the source may have meant was, "The story is set in the northwest territories of the US that encompass Washington, Oregon, Idaho, western Montana, and northern California and Nevada. It's specifically set in a valley such as Yosemite in California."
The Western Shoshone
As I'm sure you know, some Shoshone Indians did live in parts of California--though not in Yosemite. As Wikipedia notes:
Federally recognized Western Shoshone Tribes include Duckwater Shoshone Tribe (Ely, Nevada), Te-Moak Tribe of the Western Shoshone Indians of Nevada and its four Constituent Band Councils of Battle Mountain, Elko and Wells Colonies and South Fork Reservation), Timbisha Tribe of the Western Shoshone Nation (Death Valley, California region) and Yomba Western Shoshone Tribe (near Winnemucca, Nevada).
I'm guessing the writer was describing a regular Army unit that was stationed in the area. Not a Civil War unit somehow displaced to California and looking for Confederate soldiers in the Sierras.
Perhaps not coincidentally, Nevada became a state in 1864. I can imagine US soldiers in Nevada for some reason--to celebrate statehood? To obtain silver for the war effort?--and crossing into California to thwart a Shoshone "uprising."
Another explanation
Another possibility is that the source simply meant the northwest corner of California. Then the reference to the Shoshone would be wrong, but the story could be a takeoff on the history of Fort Bragg.
1855-1867
In 1855 an exploration party from the Bureau of Indian Affairs visited the area looking for a site on which to establish a reservation and, in the spring of 1856, the Mendocino Indian Reservation was established at Noyo. It was 25,000 acres and extended from what is now Simpson Lane to Abalobadiah Creek and east to Bald Hill.
In the summer of 1857, First Lieutenant Horatio G. Gibson, then serving at the Presidio in San Francisco, established a military post on the Mendocino Indian Reservation approximately one and one-half miles north of the Noyo River. He named the camp for his former commanding officer Captain Braxton Bragg, who later became a General in the Army of the Confederacy. The official date of the establishment of the fort was June 11, 1857. Its purpose was to maintain order on the reservation.
In 1862 a company from the 2nd California Infantry assumed command and remained until 1864. In October of that year the Fort Bragg garrison was loaded aboard the steamer "Panama" and completed the evacuation and abandonment of Mendocino County's first military post.
The Mendocino Indian reservation was discontinued in March 1886 and the land opened for settlement several years later.
Yet another explanation
A third possibility is that the remake really is the story of the Yosemite ("Grizzly") Indians. What I said previously would explain the "northwest territories" bit and the Union soldiers. Again Shoshone would be wrong, but otherwise the story would be roughly true:
Indians of Yosemite
The points on the floor of Yosemite at which the Indians at one time or another lived or camped are numerous. Dr. C. Hart Merriam, the greatest living authority on these people, enumerates about forty such spots and supplies the information which he obtained about them and verified from the Indians.
The number of the band at the time of discovery is not accurately known, but may be estimated to have been in the vicinity of two hundred and fifty souls.
Encounters with the Americans: Tenaya
It was their raids on miners, prospectors, and scattered storekeepers, that in 1851 led to the formation of a little volunteer army known as Savage’s Mariposa Battalion. This company went up into the as yet unpenetrated mountains in pursuit of the Yosemite "Grizzlies" and to their overwhelming astonishment burst into the hitherto undiscovered valley. In the fighting that followed, the Indians were defeated, and part of them, including the Chief Tenaya, captured. The prisoners were taken to the San Joaquin Valley and put on a reservation. Here they kept the peace, but were in great distress of mind on account of their deprivation of the natural foods to which they were accustomed in their own haunts, as well as owing to their enforced contiguity to alien or hostile tribes. Tenaya pleaded to be let off. He was finally released, returned to Yosemite, and within four years was followed by all the surviving members of the band.
You can imagine why they'd want to use Yosemite. It's so much more romantic if the Indians are living in idyllic peace beneath towering peaks, pine trees, and waterfalls. I can almost see the soaring hawks already. <g>
Anyway, this is all speculation. And the movie may have other problems we don't know about. To learn more, feel free to contact the Biograph Company. Let us know what they say.
For more on the subject, see The Best Indian Movies.
Below: A beautiful setting for a made-up story about Indians.
4 comments:
Rob,
WOW! A film where the Indians get the short end of the stick? What a novel concept! I wonder how it ends…will we get to see Indians shot off of horses?
This film seems to be more about the gimmick of remaking Biograph’s “first” film. (Their last listed self-produced feature film was released in 1940.)
We can lament how Natives Americans or Native stories are represented on the big screen all we want: Not historically accurate, stereotypical, shallow, or how few Indians are even on screen at all.
The fact remains:
Those who are financing the film’s production get to dictate what we see on the big screen.
When the Tribal community (or Bands), start financially supporting film productions (ones that hopefully can “cross-over” to a mainstream audience) you will not see any concerted efforts to bring a stronger Indian presence to the big screen from Hollywood or any of the Mini-Major film companies.
Until then; Been there, done that, got the DVD.
I wish it were not that way.
Keep the faith, Rob, maybe I’ll see you at the movies.
Jet
I've always thought that "Birth of a Nation" would be an interesting one to remake, twisted to have a pro-Black, anti-Klan bias. That's not much of a twist, since, after all, who favors the Klan now? But it would be interesting, I think.
Shoshones were in the eastern part of what is now California. The folks who signed up for the Civil War went back east, they didn't stay around to fight.
This film is historically inaccurate and extremely stereotypical and although I always like to see Native actors working I wonder why they would want to participate, except they need to work and keep food on the table. BTW, the film company never called me back. I would have been happy to discuss it with them but I guess they don't want to hear from anybody who's explaining facts.
I am Frank Marks from Biograph Company. This is in answer to any "Outrage" over our remake of the film "Red Man's View" a story of the native American plight in the mid 1800s. On the press release, there was a typo of "Northwestern territories of California" which should have read "Northwestern territories and California" so we do aplologize fro that typo. Now, to begin I will state on a personal note that my brother in law and nep[hew IS Shoshone and the Shoshone tribe consisted of three large divisions, the Northern, the Western and the Eastern.I want to make things very clear on this, though everyone has thier own opinions, however pre-mature. First, this is a respectful and "Non" sterotypcial accounting of the Native American people. This film is in development and has not even out of its embryonic stages, yet there is a comment of "This film is historically inaccurate and extremely stereotypical..." The film has not been made yet. Second, we do not want to get into a debate on inaccurracies. Historical facts are, there were "Union" soldiers in the west, (Referred to as "Union" soldiers) there were even Civil War skirmishes between Union and Confederate forces in California, and that "Union" soldiers along with other white settlers did persecute the Native Americans and drove them off thier land in "Northwestern" territories". Lastly, on the other comments, there is no "Gimmick" since the original "Red Man's View (1909)" was not Biograph's "First" film, and just for accuracy, the last film Biograph (NYC) made was in 1918. We also as an independent film company do and will make more than just concerted efforts to bring a stronger "Native American" presence to the screen. Also, as of now there were no phone calls received, but we would be happy to receive any comments or questions regarding the film by e-mailing us thru our website and thank everyone for thier interest.
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