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65 pages 2 hours read

Shelterwood

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2024

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Background

Historical Context: The Choctaw People in Oklahoma

The earlier timeline featured in Shelterwood takes place in southeastern Oklahoma in 1909. The central conflict of the timeline, which focuses on the displacement and exploitation of Choctaw children by wealthy white settlers, is based on actual historical injustices perpetrated against the Choctaw people. While the novel deals specifically with the experiences of Choctaw characters, this context also closely mirrors the historical experiences of the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Muscogee, and Seminole peoples during this general time frame.

Using earlier exploitative treaties with Indigenous nations as a precedent, President Andrew Jackson persuaded Congress to enact what was then referred to as the “Indian Removal Act” of 1830, which empowered the president to “grant lands west of the Mississippi in exchange for [Indigenous] lands within existing state borders” (Drexler, Ken. “Indian Removal Act: Primary Documents in American History.” Library of Congress Research Guides, 11 Oct. 2024). However, what this amounted to in practice was the forced removal of thousands of people from the Choctaw Nation and other nearby nations that originated in Mississippi and Alabama. The Choctaws were the first of five southern nations to be forcibly relocated to Oklahoma from 1831 to 1838. The journey of close to 20,000 Choctaw people (along with approximately 50,000 members of the other southern nations) was grueling and deadly.

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