Mary and I: Forty Years with the Sioux by Stephen Return Riggs

(1 User reviews)   555
Riggs, Stephen Return, 1812-1883 Riggs, Stephen Return, 1812-1883
English
Hey, I just finished this incredible book that feels like finding someone's personal journal from 150 years ago. It's called 'Mary and I: Forty Years with the Sioux,' and it's written by Stephen Riggs, a missionary who lived with his wife among the Dakota Sioux from 1837 onward. This isn't a dry history book. It's his raw, personal account of trying to build a life and share his faith with a people whose world was being ripped apart. The real tension here isn't about battles; it's in the quiet, daily struggle of two cultures colliding. You see Riggs' genuine affection for the people he lived with, but you also see his blind spots and the heartbreaking reality of broken treaties, disease, and the slow erosion of a way of life. He was there through the devastating U.S.-Dakota War of 1862, which shattered everything. Reading this is like sitting across from a complicated man who witnessed the frontier vanish. It's moving, frustrating, and completely unforgettable.
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Stephen Riggs wasn't a famous general or a politician. He was a Presbyterian missionary from Pennsylvania who, in 1837, moved with his new wife, Mary, to what is now Minnesota to live among the Dakota Sioux. 'Mary and I' is his firsthand story of those four decades. He writes about learning the Dakota language (eventually helping create a dictionary and translate the Bible), building mission stations, and raising his family on the frontier. The book follows their lives through seasons of relative peace, intense cultural exchange, and growing tension as American settlers pushed westward.

The Story

The narrative is a chronological journey through Riggs' life and work. It starts with hopeful beginnings—learning the language, earning trust, and establishing a home. You read about daily life, friendships with Dakota leaders, and the monumental task of translation. But the shadow of American expansion grows longer. The story builds toward the catastrophic U.S.-Dakota War of 1862, a brutal conflict that erupted from broken promises, hunger, and desperation. Riggs and his family were caught in the middle, and his account of the war and its bloody aftermath is gripping and sobering. The book doesn't end with the war; it follows the painful consequences, including the mass execution of 38 Dakota men and the forced removal of the people he had spent his life with.

Why You Should Read It

This book gets under your skin because it's so personal. Riggs doesn't write as a neutral observer. He's a man of deep faith trying to do what he thinks is right, and you see his world through that lens. That's what makes it so valuable and sometimes challenging. You feel his admiration for Dakota customs and his grief at the suffering he witnesses. But you also see the cultural imperialism of his mission clearly. It's a primary source that doesn't offer easy answers. It shows the complexity of history through one man's flawed, dedicated, and eyewitness perspective. You come away not with a simple history lesson, but with a felt sense of a tragic, transformative period.

Final Verdict

This is a must-read for anyone interested in the real, human stories of the American West, beyond the cowboy myths. It's perfect for readers of history who want a primary source that reads like a memoir, and for anyone curious about the complex, often painful, interactions between missionaries and Indigenous nations. Be prepared: it's not an easy, feel-good story. It's a profound, sometimes uncomfortable, and essential look at a pivotal time, told by someone who was there in the thick of it, doing his best and often failing to bridge an impossible divide.

Jessica Jones
3 months ago

If you enjoy this genre, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. Exactly what I needed.

5
5 out of 5 (1 User reviews )

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