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Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations
The Graduate School
2004
James Fenimore Cooper's Frontier: The
Pioneers as History
Thomas Berson
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ii
The members of the Committee approve the thesis of Thomas Berson defended on July 1,
2004.
---------------------------
Frederick Davis
Professor Directing Thesis
----------------------------
John Fenstermaker
Committee Member
----------------------------
Ned Stuckey-French
Committee Member
Approved:
------------------------------
John Fenstermaker, Chair, Program in American and Florida Studies
------------------------------
Donald Foss, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences
The Office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee
members.
iv
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Special thanks to John Fenstermaker, who gave me the opportunity to come back
to school and to teach and to Fritz Davis, who helped me find direction in my studies.
Additional thanks to the aforementioned and also to Ned Stuckey-French for
taking the time out of their summers to sit on the committee for this paper.
v
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Abstract ................................................................................................................. vi.
INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................1
LITERATURE REVIEW ........................................................................................6
1. RELIGION.........................................................................................................15
2. MORALITY AND VIRTUE .............................................................................25
3. PRACTICAL SCIENCE AND EDUCATION..................................................36
4. A CHANGING LAND ......................................................................................47
CONCLUSION......................................................................................................62
APPENDICES .......................................................................................................66
REFERENCES ......................................................................................................75
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH .................................................................................80
vi
ABSTRACT
This thesis examines aspects of American culture and society in Post-
Revolutionary upstate New York through the lens of James Fenimore Cooper’s novel The
Pioneers. While scholars have looked to The Pioneers as an object of literary criticism or
for overarching American themes such as manners or authority, I examine The Pioneers’
value as a historical document.
Specifically, I examine the clash between a new culture still in its infancy and an
existing one in its last days. The frontier settlers in Cooper’s work, as in reality, imposed
their religion, science, and land-ownership principles on the remnants of native
Americans and pre-revolutionary “squatters” even as their own understandings of those
institutions were changing.
In this paper I examine how, although settlers attempted to impose their religion
on native Americans, religion did not play as major a role in guiding frontier morality,
but that Jeffersonian notions of republican motherhood and innate morality did. At the
same time, these notions of morality came into conflict with the new laws that were being
enforced while settlers were imposing Christianity onto the indigenous residents of
America. These topics are the subject of Chapters One and Two.
Fledging notions of applied science were brought to bear in an attempt to create a
sustainable long-term development, but that scientific institutions in America, such as
medicine, were notably deficient. These issues are the subject of Chapter Three.
Following that, I also discuss how land-ownership issues were complicated by pre-
existing claims on the land, by Indians, Loyalist settlers and squatters. Finally, I explore
how Cooper presciently staked out proto-environmentalist themes long before modern
notions of conservation were developed, and how his portrayal of these themes is
valuable to understanding ideas of the Turnerian “frontier.”
The paper examines all these ideas by comparing Cooper’s writing to that of
historical scholars and Cooper’s contemporary cultural observers, as well as by utilizing
other primary source materials.
1
INTRODUCTION
In the introduction to The Pioneers, or Sources of the Susquehanna, James Fenimore
Cooper acknowledges that the book is meant to provide a “descriptive tale” of the area of upstate
New York in which he lived as a boy. However, he wrote,
[T]hey who will take the trouble to read it may be glad to know how much of its
contents is literal fact, and how much is intended to represent a general picture.
The author is very sensible that, had he confined himself to the latter, always the
most effective, as it is the most valuable, mode of conveying knowledge of this
nature, he would have made a far better book. But in commencing to describe
scenes, and perhaps he may add characters, that were so familiar to his own
youth, there was a constant temptation to delineate that which he had known,
rather than that which he might have imagined.
1
In other words, The Pioneers is not simply a work of fiction, nor is it pure autobiography.
Rather, it is a hybrid of the two, a colorized and perhaps romanticized recollection of
Cooperstown, New York in the late 18
th
century. As such, it offers value not only as a work of
literature but also as a primary source for historical analysis. Unlike writers such as James
McCullough or Michael or Jeff Shaara, who might create historical fiction from research done a
century or more later, or a Frederick Douglass or Sojourner Truth, who offer history through
literal accounts of their own experience, Cooper has left us with history through the equivalent of
a soft-focus lens: the picture is true, but the outlines are blurred. It is a recollection of a time and
place, but it is not autobiography. Real themes and characteristics are explored, but under the
liberating style of fiction. The Pioneers is also unique in another way: according to Terence
Martin, only 60 to 80 novels were written in America between 1789 and 1820 a figure of less
than three per year!
2
Hence The Pioneers, written in 1823, stands virtually alone in the canon of
American literature: contemporary historical fiction for the immediate post-Revolutionary
period.
“In order to prevent mistake,” Cooper reminds us, “it may be well to say that the
incidents of this tale are purely a fiction. The literal facts are chiefly connected with the natural
1
James Fenimore Cooper, The Pioneers (New York: Signet Classic Books, 1964) v.
2
Terence Martin, “Social Institutions in the Early American Novel,”
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