Vested Interests: Trusteeship and Native Dispossession in the United States

Emilie Connolly

Book cover for Vested Interests: Trusteeship and Native Dispossession in the United States
Image for variant 9780691240121
Book cover for Vested Interests: Trusteeship and Native Dispossession in the United States
Image for variant 9780691240121

Vested Interests: Trusteeship and Native Dispossession in the United States

Vested Interests: Trusteeship and Native Dispossession in the United States

Emilie Connolly

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Description

WINNER OF THE BANCROFT PRIZE

How a system of colonial trusteeship converted Native wealth into settler capital

From the earliest days of its founding, the United States set its sights on Native territory. Amid better-known "Indian wars," the federal government quietly built an empire by treaty, offering payments to Native peoples for their land. Routinely inadequate, these payments were nonetheless pivotal because federal officials chose not to deliver them as a lump sum. Instead, the government kept the bulk of payments owed to Native nations under its own control as a trustee, and made access to future installments contingent on Native compliance. In Vested Interests, Emilie Connolly describes how a system of "fiduciary colonialism" seized a continent from its original inhabitants--and, ironically, furnished Native peoples with financial resources that sustained their nations.

Connolly documents two centuries of dispossession in the guise of fiduciary benevolence. Acting as both dispossessor and trustee, the federal government invested Native wealth in state bonds that financed banks, canals, and other infrastructural projects that enabled the country to expand further westward. Meanwhile, Native peoples protected the money they did receive for future generations, investing it in their own institutions and mounting legal challenges to hold their trustees accountable. Still, federal trusteeship placed tight constraints on Native economies with the aim of containing Native power, forcing nations to endure through sheer resilience and ingenuity. By chronicling the long history of Native land dispossession through financial paternalism, Vested Interests reveals the unequal dividends of colonialism in the United States.

About the Author

Emilie Connolly is assistant professor of history at Brandeis University.

Critical Reviews

"A landmark study that historians of Native American and U.S. history should read, discuss, and appreciate widely."---Ryan Hall, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History

"Winner of the James A. Rawley Award, Organization of American Historians"

"Winner of the Bancroft Prize in American History"

Publishing Information

Publisher: Princeton University Press
Pub date: 2025-11-25
Length: 336 pages

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