
- 338 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Comprised of the frontier military and the Indian conflicts of the southwest preceding the Civil War. The conflicts and eventual peace. Well researched and written.
"Between 1845 and 1848 the United States came into possession of a princely domain. During that short period of time it acquired Texas, the Oregon country, and the Mexican Cession—more than a million square miles of territory—and thereby virtually established its present western and southern boundaries. Then came the discovery of gold in California and the mighty emigrant waves to the El Dorado. The problem of frontier defense, ever present from the beginning of the nation's history, was truly formidable now. The frontier was much longer and more remote, and the pioneers, though more numerous, were often dangerously scattered. The Indian was too close to the white man. The national government had acquired an added responsibility—defense of the new frontier.
The period 1848-60 witnessed the evolution of the trans-Mississippi policy of defense. United States armies and engineers, supplementing the activities of the unofficial explorers, traders and trappers, blazed the trail for the march of empire...Moreover, the frontier army created an era full of color and romance which left a deep impression on our literature, our drama, and our arts. Some of our most distinguished military leaders of the Civil War—McClellan, Sherman, Grant, and Lee—served their apprenticeship on the western frontier. It is the purpose of this study to examine important phases of frontier defense in our Far Southwest—Texas, the Territories of New Mexico and Utah, and California—in the twelve years preceding the Civil War. Neighboring areas, such as present-day Kansas, Colorado, and Oklahoma, necessarily formed an integral part of the Southwest of the period."-Print ed.
"Between 1845 and 1848 the United States came into possession of a princely domain. During that short period of time it acquired Texas, the Oregon country, and the Mexican Cession—more than a million square miles of territory—and thereby virtually established its present western and southern boundaries. Then came the discovery of gold in California and the mighty emigrant waves to the El Dorado. The problem of frontier defense, ever present from the beginning of the nation's history, was truly formidable now. The frontier was much longer and more remote, and the pioneers, though more numerous, were often dangerously scattered. The Indian was too close to the white man. The national government had acquired an added responsibility—defense of the new frontier.
The period 1848-60 witnessed the evolution of the trans-Mississippi policy of defense. United States armies and engineers, supplementing the activities of the unofficial explorers, traders and trappers, blazed the trail for the march of empire...Moreover, the frontier army created an era full of color and romance which left a deep impression on our literature, our drama, and our arts. Some of our most distinguished military leaders of the Civil War—McClellan, Sherman, Grant, and Lee—served their apprenticeship on the western frontier. It is the purpose of this study to examine important phases of frontier defense in our Far Southwest—Texas, the Territories of New Mexico and Utah, and California—in the twelve years preceding the Civil War. Neighboring areas, such as present-day Kansas, Colorado, and Oklahoma, necessarily formed an integral part of the Southwest of the period."-Print ed.
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Yes, you can access The March of Empire by Averam Burton Bender in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Historia & Historia de la Guerra de Secesión. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Topic
HistoriaTable of contents
- Title page
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- DEDICATION
- Preface
- Illustrations
- CHAPTER I — The Land and the People
- CHAPTER II — Evolution of a Defense Policy
- CHAPTER III — Fortifying the New Frontier
- CHAPTER IV — Opening New Trails to the Far West
- CHAPTER V — Western River Surveys
- CHAPTER VI — Explorations for Defense
- CHAPTER VII — Life of the Soldier on the Frontier
- CHAPTER VIII — Texas Indians Hurl a Challenge
- CHAPTER IX — New Mexico Tribesmen Go on the Warpath
- CHAPTER X — Friction with the Mormons and Indians in the Great Basin
- CHAPTER XI — California Indian Wars
- CHAPTER XII — The Texas Reservation Experiment
- CHAPTER XIII — California Indian Reservations
- CHAPTER XIV — On the Eve of the Civil War
- References
- PRINCIPAL MILITARY POSTS IN THE SOUTHWEST, 1848-60
- Bibliography