Order, order! Mad Hatter has a good thing going here, please do not sidetrack with the same old hobby horses.
I want to go back to the point that Macruran raised:
They are more Karl May fantasy Indians than accurate portrayals.
True! It is hard to overrate the impact of Karl May stories and their spinoffs on German culture and beyond. This explains why until recently the Western theme has been so prominent with PM (much more pronounced than, say, in the Lego catalogue), and why it takes liberties with the American original. Nonetheless, there are some great authentic details in the Native American sets: for example, the funeral scaffold from set 3870 just blows my socks off (and begs the question of what such thing is doing in a play set??
).
But I struggle to understand the ACW theme with PM. I mean, the brand does not touch modern warfare (but compensates this with an extreme focus on violence in sets for any older period
), which is fair enough, but why then go for the ACW? I mean, this isn't some safe "exotic" violence like a knights’ melee, it was a proper modern war! I understand that it fits the Western theme, but what I really would like to know is whether the American Civil War somehow appealed to the (German) consumer of the time to merit developing the pertinent sets. Was ACW a topic in (children’s) literature and TV back in the 70s / early 80s? Does it feature in the Karl May narrative? I love to know more about the genesis of the sub-theme.
Best wishes
StJohn