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Natty Bumppo
View on Wikipedia| Natty Bumppo | |
|---|---|
| Leatherstocking Tales character | |
![]() Natty Bumppo (left) from a 1989 Soviet stamp on themes from Leatherstocking Tales | |
| First appearance | The Pioneers |
| Last appearance | The Deerslayer |
| Created by | James Fenimore Cooper |
| In-universe information | |
| Full name | Nathaniel Bumppo |
| Alias | Hawkeye among many others |
| Gender | Male |
| Occupation | Scout, huntsman, explorer |
Nathaniel "Natty" Bumppo is a fictional character and the protagonist of James Fenimore Cooper's pentalogy of novels known as the Leatherstocking Tales. He appears throughout the series as an archetypal American ranger[clarification needed], and has been portrayed many times in a variety of media in popular culture.
Fictional biography
[edit]Natty Bumppo, the child of white parents, grew up among Delaware Indians and was educated by Moravian Christians.[1][2] In adulthood, he is a near-fearless warrior skilled in many weapons, chiefly the long rifle. He is most often shown alongside his Mohican foster brother Chingachgook and nephew Uncas.
Novels
[edit]Bumppo is featured in a series of novels by James Fenimore Cooper collectively called the Leatherstocking Tales. The novels in the collection are as follows:
| Publication Date |
Story Dates |
Title | Subtitle |
|---|---|---|---|
1841
|
1740–1755
|
The Deerslayer | The First War Path |
1826
|
1757
|
The Last of the Mohicans | A Narrative of 1757 |
1840
|
1758–1759
|
The Pathfinder | The Inland Sea |
1823
|
1793
|
The Pioneers | The Sources of the Susquehanna; A Descriptive Tale |
1827
|
1804
|
The Prairie | A Tale |
The tales recount significant events in Natty Bumppo's life from 1740 to 1806.[3]
Aliases
[edit]Before his appearance in The Deerslayer, Bumppo went by the aliases "Straight-Tongue", "The Pigeon", and the "Lap-Ear". After obtaining his first rifle, he gained the sobriquet "Deerslayer". He is subsequently known as "Hawkeye" and "La Longue Carabine" in The Last of the Mohicans, as "Pathfinder" in The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea, as "Leatherstocking" (from which the series' title is drawn) in The Pioneers, and as "the trapper" in The Prairie.
Portrayal
[edit]Bumppo has been portrayed most often in adaptations of The Last of the Mohicans. He was portrayed by Harry Lorraine in the 1920 film version, by Harry Carey in the 1932 film serial version, by Randolph Scott in the 1936 film version, by Kenneth Ives in the 1971 BBC serial, by Steve Forrest in the 1977 TV movie and by Daniel Day-Lewis in the 1992 film version.

Day-Lewis received a BAFTA Film Award nomination for Best Actor in 1993, won an Evening Standard British Film Award for Best Actor in 1993, and won an ALFS Award for British Actor of the Year in 1993 for his interpretation of the character. For the 1992 film, director Michael Mann changed the character's name to Nathaniel Poe, fearing audiences would laugh at "Natty Bumppo".[4] The character is also portrayed as the adopted son of Chingachgook and brother of Uncas.
Adaptations of The Deerslayer have seen Bumppo played by Emil Mamelok in the 1920 film The Deerslayer and Chingachgook, by Bruce Kellogg in the 1943 film, by Lex Barker in the 1957 film, and by Steve Forrest in the 1978 TV movie.
Adaptions of The Pathfinder have seen Bumppo played by Paul Massie in the 1973 5-part BBC mini-series and Kevin Dillon in the 1996 TV movie.
Additionally, he was portrayed by Michael O'Shea in the 1947 film Last of the Redskins, George Montgomery in the 1950 film The Iroquois Trail, by John Hart in the 1957 TV series Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans, by Hellmut Lange in the 1969 German TV series Die Lederstrumpferzählungen, by Cliff DeYoung in the 1984 PBS mini-series The Leatherstocking Tales (which compressed The Deerslayer, The Last of the Mohicans, and The Pathfinder into four episodes), and by Lee Horsley in the 1994 TV series Hawkeye.
In popular culture
[edit]Fiction
[edit]- Bumppo appears as a character in John Myers Myers' novel Silverlock (1949).
- The character Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce, from M*A*S*H, takes his nickname from the Native American name given to Natty Bumppo. In both the TV series and the original Richard Hooker novel on which it is based, it is stated that The Last of the Mohicans is the only book Pierce's father had ever read.
- Bumppo is known as Dan'l "Hawkeye" Bonner in Sara Donati's novel series, beginning with Into the Wilderness, meant as a sequel to The Leatherstocking books. The series centers on Hawkeye and Cora's son, Nathaniel Bonner.
- Bumppo is featured in the comic book series Jack of Fables, both in name and as "Hawkeye", along with Slue-Foot Sue (Pecos Bill's first wife).
- Bumppo is referred to in the graphic novel series The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen as being part of the 18th-century incarnation of the league.
- Near the end of Mississippi Jack, the fifth in the best-selling Bloody Jack series of female adventures by L.A. Meyer, an adopted white Shawnee called Lightfoot, a rifleman who always travels with his native Shawnee "brother", reveals his white surname to be "Bumpus" in an obvious tribute to Cooper's Natty Bumppo. Thinly veiled or unveiled characters from the history and culture of the time of the Leatherstocking novels is a repeating feature of the Bloody Jack book series.
- The Marvel Comics character Hawkeye takes his name from Natty Bumppo, whom he portrayed during his time as a carnival marksman before becoming a superhero.
- The character Gus Brannhard adopts a Fuzzy and names him Natty Bumppo in H. Beam Piper's novel Fuzzies and Other People (ISBN 0-441-26176-0).
- Song of the Mohicans, written by Paul Block (Bantam Books, 1985, ISBN 978-0553565584), is a direct sequel to The Last of the Mohicans. Taking up the story a few days after Uncas' death and burial, it recounts the adventures of Hawkeye and Chingachgook as they travel north to discover the connection between an Oneida brave and the Mohican tribe, and whether a sachem truly holds the key to the ultimate fate of the Mohicans.
- Natty Bumppo is featured in the Marvel comic Deadpool Killustrated, as part of a group of time-traveling heroes (Beowulf, Hua Mulan, and Sherlock Holmes and his partner Dr. Watson), intent on stopping Deadpool from killing all literary characters.
- Tinker, a major character in Amor Towles' novel, Rules of Civility, wants to be Natty Bumppo for the day.
- There is an intelligent dog named Natty Bumppo in John Brunner's novel "Shockwave Rider".
- Natty Bumppo appears as a character in Diana Gabaldon's eighth Outlander series novel, Written in My Own Heart's Blood.
- Natty Bumppo, referred to as “Nasty” Bumppo, makes an appearance in Thomas King’s 1993 novel Green Grass, Running Water, in a scene in which he sets out to kill Old Woman, whom he calls “Chingachgook.”
- Natty Bumppo, referred to also as Davey Shipman, is a character in Lauren Groff's novel The Monsters of Templeton, along with Chingachgook and James Franklin Temple, a version of the author James Fenimore Cooper.
- Natty Bumppo is referenced as a nickname in Leif Enger's Peace Like A River.
Mascots
[edit]University of Iowa's mascot, the Hawkeye was taken from The Last of the Mohicans novel.[5]
Music
[edit]Natty Bumppo was the name of several pop music bands in the 1970s, including bands from Dayton, Ohio, and central Utah.
People
[edit]Natty Bumppo is the name of the author of The Columbus Book Of Euchre and House Of Evil.
Postage stamps
[edit]In 1989, the Soviet Union issued a series of postage stamps depicting themes of Cooper's The Leatherstocking Tales.

Sculptures and memorials
[edit]
- The Lederstrumpfbrunnen (Leatherstocking fountain) in Edenkoben (Germany) contains a life-sized statue of Natty Bumppo
- The British sculptor Thomas Nicholls designed a wooden sculpture of Natty Bumppo as part of an ensemble of six figures of American literature. The ensemble belongs to the interior design of Two Temple Place, London.[6]
Media
[edit]- In Total War: Warhammer II the Skaven unit roster features a specialty unit named Natty Buboe’s Sharpshooters, who utilize long rifles to fire projectiles at an exceptionally long range. This unit also appeared on the tabletop in Warhammer Armies: Skaven (7th Edition).
References
[edit]- ^ "The Deerslayer: Critical Essays: Cooper's Indians". Cliffsnotes.
- ^ "Natty Bumppo (fictional character)". Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
- ^ James Fenimore Cooper Society's online plot summaries of the chronologically first (The Deerslayer)[1] and last (The Prairie)[2] novels, indicating the initial and final years of the Leatherstocking saga.
- ^ Belue, Ted Franklin (July 20, 2011). The Hunters of Kentucky: A Narrative History of America's First Far West, 1750-1792 (Reprint ed.). Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, United States: Stackpole Books. p. 141. ISBN 978-1461751908. Retrieved January 10, 2022.
- ^ "University of Iowa Official Athletic Site Traditions". Hawkeyesports.com. Archived from the original on 2012-10-19. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
- ^ ""Natty Bumppo (Hawkeye)" by Thomas Nicholls". victorianweb.org.
Further reading
[edit]- Colin A. Clarke, "Like a Mirror Reflecting Itself: Natty Bumppo, The Virginian, and the Fate of the American Frontier," Presented at the 11th Cooper Seminar, James Fenimore Cooper: His Country and His Art at the State University of New York College at Oneonta, July 1997.
- David Leverenz, "The Last Real Man in America: From Natty Bumppo to Batman," American Literary History 1991 3(4):753–781. (caution: article requires money for full access)
- Warren S. Walker: Plots and characters in the fiction of James Fenimore Cooper. Archon Books, 1978
External links
[edit]- "Hawkeye (Character) from The Last of the Mohicans (1992)," The Internet Movie Database
Natty Bumppo
View on GrokipediaKnown successively by aliases such as Deerslayer, Hawkeye, Pathfinder, Leatherstocking, and Trapper, Bumppo exemplifies the archetype of the honorable scout and hunter, possessing exceptional skills in woodcraft, tracking, and marksmanship with his long rifle Killdeer, while adhering to a personal ethic emphasizing Christian duty to "strive to do right," temperance in taking life, and aversion to waste or materialism.[2][1]
The series comprises The Deerslayer, The Last of the Mohicans, The Pathfinder, The Pioneers, and The Prairie, each showcasing Bumppo's role in frontier conflicts involving European settlers, Native American tribes, and natural perils, often as a guide or defender guided by stoic sincerity and trust in divine providence.[1]
Bumppo's character develops from naive confidence in youth—marked by his first scalping and rejection of settled life—to reflective alienation in maturity, culminating in philosophical melancholy as an elder witnessing the inexorable advance of civilization that displaces the wild integrity he cherishes.[1]
Origins and Literary Context
James Fenimore Cooper's Creation
James Fenimore Cooper first introduced Natty Bumppo, under the alias Leatherstocking, in his novel The Pioneers, published on February 1, 1823, depicting the character as an aged, reclusive hunter eking out an existence amid the encroachment of settlers in upstate New York around 1793.[3] The character's portrayal emphasized practical mastery of forest survival, including marksmanship and tracking, rooted in the exigencies of pre-industrial frontier conditions where self-provisioning was essential for endurance against environmental hazards and scarce resources.[1] Cooper developed Bumppo as an archetype of unadorned American individualism, embodying the causal logic of wilderness adaptation—prioritizing direct empirical engagement with nature over abstract societal norms—to contrast with the legalistic and commercial encroachments of pioneer society.[4] This conception drew from Cooper's familiarity with historical settler migrations and hunter practices in the post-Revolutionary era, avoiding idealized heroism by anchoring Bumppo's ethos in verifiable pragmatics like regulated game harvesting to sustain long-term habitability of the land.[5] Rather than a singular historical prototype, the figure amalgamated traits from multiple frontiersmen Cooper encountered or recalled from his youth, ensuring a composite grounded in observed realities rather than fabrication.[6] The character's unanticipated resonance prompted Cooper to expand Bumppo's chronology across the Leatherstocking Tales, with prequels such as The Deerslayer (1841) retroactively detailing his formative years as a young scout during the French and Indian War era, thereby constructing a lifespan narrative spanning over seven decades of continental transformation.[7] This iterative development reinforced Bumppo's role as a lens for examining the inexorable westward push of settlement, where individual autonomy yielded to collective organization, without romanticizing the losses as moral absolutes but as inevitable outcomes of demographic and technological pressures.[8]Inspirations from Historical Frontiersmen
James Fenimore Cooper modeled Natty Bumppo as a composite figure drawing from the archetype of 18th-century American frontiersmen, particularly long hunters and scouts who operated in the Appalachian and trans-Appalachian regions during the mid-1700s. These individuals, active amid conflicts like the French and Indian War (1754–1763), exemplified self-reliant adaptation to forested terrains through empirical mastery of local ecologies, rather than romantic invention. Cooper, writing in the 1820s, incorporated elements from documented narratives of such men, synthesizing their documented exploits into Natty's persona to reflect causal necessities of frontier survival, including prolonged solitary hunts lasting months and navigation without formal maps.[9] Prominent influences included Daniel Boone (1734–1820), whose 1769–1771 explorations of Kentucky demonstrated exceptional woodcraft, including trailblazing through dense wilderness and precise marksmanship with Kentucky long rifles, skills Natty replicates in evading pursuers and provisioning via game. Boone's documented feats, such as leading settlers through the Cumberland Gap in 1775 while repelling ambushes, paralleled Natty's role as a guide and defender, underscoring the historical reality of frontiersmen's reliance on intimate terrain knowledge for territorial expansion. Similarly, Simon Kenton (1755–1836), a Boone associate known for his 1777–1778 scouting missions during Lord Dunmore's War, contributed to the archetype through verified endurance feats, like evading capture via stealthy tracking evasion over 100 miles, which echoed Natty's documented prowess in discerning subtle environmental cues.[10][11] Natty's rifle proficiency mirrored the tactical evolution of American scouts, who adopted rifled barrels by the 1750s for superior accuracy in irregular warfare, achieving effective ranges of 200–300 yards compared to 50–100 yards for British smoothbores, as evidenced in ranger companies during the French and Indian War. Tracking techniques, central to Natty's survival, aligned with historical practices like interpreting bent grasses, displaced stones, and animal spoor—methods detailed in period accounts of partisan fighters who used them to ambush foes or locate resources in unmapped territories. These skills stemmed from first-hand adaptations to causal environmental pressures, such as seasonal migrations and predatory threats, enabling scouts to sustain operations with minimal supplies, a necessity borne out in journals from expeditions like those under Major Robert Rogers in 1758. Cooper's portrayal thus grounded Natty in verifiable historical competencies, countering later urban interpretations that downplayed their pragmatic efficacy in shaping colonial outcomes.[12][13]Publication Sequence of the Leatherstocking Tales
The Leatherstocking Tales consist of five novels featuring Natty Bumppo, published by James Fenimore Cooper in a non-chronological order relative to the character's lifespan depicted within them. This sequence begins with The Pioneers in 1823, followed by The Last of the Mohicans in 1826, The Prairie in 1827, The Pathfinder in 1840, and The Deerslayer in 1841.[14][15]| Title | Publication Year |
|---|---|
| The Pioneers | 1823 |
| The Last of the Mohicans | 1826 |
| The Prairie | 1827 |
| The Pathfinder | 1840 |
| The Deerslayer | 1841 |

