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A Companion to American Poetry


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      In an 1840 appraisal of Samuel George Morton’s highly influential Crania Americana, a reviewer in the Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery used the similarities between Incan skulls and those of the Eastern tribes as evidence to confirm the cultural similarities that he already imagined existed between them. His commentary thus links these tribes and the Inca through physiognomic traits while simultaneously distancing both groups from other Native people—people with whom these eastern tribes clearly shared closer genetic traits than with the Inca. In his estimation, the “Inca or modern Peruvian skull….is indicative…of having belonged to a superior stock of men—a stock well calculated to prove victors and conquerors, in warfare with the others” (Reviews 1840, p. 122). Similarly, he mentioned that “the [Seminole] head is indicative of no common capacity, and shows the Seminole to be a well-endowed variety of the American race. No wonder that…the conquest of them should be difficult….Without giving their measurements, we shall merely mention that the skulls of the Creek and Cherokees are on the same order as the Seminoles. And their history testifies that those two nations also are warlike and formidable….[However, T]he Indians of west of the Mississippi and east of the Rockies, are of an inferior order. This appears [i.e., is confirmed] from the following measurements…” (Reviews 1840, p. 124). Interestingly, Morton’s work not only offers readers imaginary genetic links between the Inca and these eastern tribes but also provides the explanation for the US government’s difficulty in suppressing or manipulating them. Perhaps unsurprisingly, these same cranial measurements also become Morton’s foundation for asserting that it is nevertheless white America’s ultimate destiny to “conquer” if not “eradicate” such natives, as his largest cranial capacity measurements were reserved for whites.