Unnamed Anglo-Saxon Pioneers

Display Name: 
Unnamed Anglo-Saxon Pioneers
Sort Name: 
Unnamed Anglo-Saxon Pioneers
Race: 
White
Gender: 
Multi Gender Group
Class: 
Lower Class
Rank: 
Minor
Vitality: 
Alive
Biography: 

The narrative's history of Mississippi includes "the Anglo-Saxon, the pioneer" who came into the area after it became part of the U.S. (81), also referred to as "the pioneers, the hunters, the forest men with rifles" (171). The narrator identifies "the pioneer" as male - "the tall man, roaring with Protestant scripture and boiled whiskey" (81) - but with him comes his and his wife's family. We include in this group the "brawling teamsters and trappers and flatboatmen" who often are held in the jail (180). As the institutions of society move into the region, this figure becomes "obsolete," vanishing like the Indians, the Spaniards and the Frenchmen who lived there before him because "only the wilderness could feed and nourish him" (82).

Ethnicity: 
Anglo-Saxon
Individual or Group: 
Group
Character changes class in this text: 

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