Yes, you’ve read this before, but maybe I’m going to make this an annual post on this holiday . . . because it’s still true.
Happy 4th of July from the Great Plains Trail! On this most American of holidays, it’s time to recognize (and brag just a bit) that the most American of landscapes is indeed the Great Plains. I will expand on this idea briefly so you can get back to grillin’ and chillin’ in your neighbor’s backyard.
In the varied and intricate history of the country we call America, with its many cultural influences and stories, it can be argued that the dominant cultural thread is a European one. From the time of Columbus onward, the creation of what was to become America was, by and large, a grand European project. Yes, I know, there are countless other influences, and yes, I know, we signed the Declaration of Independence and then overthrew our European oppressors in the Revolutionary War, but that was hardly the end of European influence.
One of the reasons why Europeans took to the place so readily was that it reminded them of Europe. The coasts, the forests, the mountains, the lakes – they all reminded Europeans of some place they had left behind in “the old country.” All of them except the Great Plains – there is simply no equivalent landscape in Europe to compare with the Great Plains. Europe has mountains, hills, valleys, coasts, forests, and even deserts, but there are no major grasslands in Europe. It is most likely this fact that leaves the Great Plains relatively empty even today despite a nation of over 300,000,000 people. The Europeans that “settled” the nation stuck to what they knew, and they knew nothing of the grasslands, and so they were generally avoided, or passed through as quickly as possible. They remain, if not unspoiled, at least unpopulated today.
The Great Plains, as the only truly American landscape, gave rise to such true American icons as “the cowboy,” “the buffalo,” “the teepee,” “the covered wagon,” and “the ranch.” The Great Plains also created the unique American value of self reliance and independence. These things were not seen as virtues until Americans ventured beyond the well watered landscapes of the east.
So there you have it, and you are welcome to disagree, but I declare that as far as landscapes are concerned, the most American is the vast open country of the Great Plains! Not only is it the largest single landscape we have (covering at least 1/4 of the country, depending on how you define it), but it also gave rise to who we are, and how we define ourselves as a people and a nation.
Happy Independence Day!
4 Responses
Reblogged this on GreenPackin' and commented:
A little bit about The Grasslands – reposted from The Great Plains Trail.
Thanks for the Re-Blog Greenpackin! Hope things are going well with you . . .
go here for the greatest vitamin c serum around