Abstract

Research into the origins of federal-Indian policy most often leads into the prevailing political ideology of the time period under examination. It is odd, then, to find that for a brief time in history the prevailing policy at the official level of the United States and of the majority of the other American nations leads to the basic longterm influences of a British novelist, D.H. Lawrence, a some time New York City settlement worker, John Collier, and a wealthy American collector of social lions, Mabel Dodge Luhan. The novelist and the settlement worker were brought together by the collector of social lions, Mabel Dodge Luhan, one of the great patrons of this century. She was, as Ansel Adams has put it:

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