Despite these criticisms, Knight\u27s work has value. It offers insights into the daily rigors of nineteenth-century Army life and examines the sources from which much public knowledge of Indians flowed. Fans of military history may enjoy the book and may join the correspondents\u27 armchair generalling, but readers interested in the correspondents and the history of journalism will have to wade through a lot of extraneous material to get what they want
As a community of scholars, we need to ask more from books like this. Despite a topic ripe with frui...
Review of: Wolves for the Blue Soldiers: Indian Scouts and Auxiliaries with the United States Army, ...
Few frontier military officers could claim a more varied and significant combat career during the se...
Despite these criticisms, Knight\u27s work has value. It offers insights into the daily rigors of ni...
James Dempsey estimates that some four hundred Indians from Western Canada served during the Great W...
Review of: Crimsoned Prairie: The Wars Between the United States and the Plains Indians During the W...
Despite steady interest in the wars on the American frontier during the last half of the nineteenth ...
John M. Coward\u27s study of newspapers and Native Americans could have been just another how the p...
Careful students of the American West have long realized that making valid generalizations about the...
The Indian War of 1864 provides the historian of the West with a wealth of sources, as one may imagi...
Review of: Let My People Know: American Indian Journalism, 1828-1978. Murphy, James E. and Murphy, S...
Arguing that the Indian Wars after the Civil War were the longest campaign ever waged by the United ...
Jerome Greene, a well known historian of the Indian War period, has written another important contri...
Review of: Soldiers West: Biographies from the Military Frontier. Hutton, Paul Andrew, ed
The U.S. Army excused the killing of one of its officers, Lt. Edward W. Casey, by Plenty Horses, an ...
As a community of scholars, we need to ask more from books like this. Despite a topic ripe with frui...
Review of: Wolves for the Blue Soldiers: Indian Scouts and Auxiliaries with the United States Army, ...
Few frontier military officers could claim a more varied and significant combat career during the se...
Despite these criticisms, Knight\u27s work has value. It offers insights into the daily rigors of ni...
James Dempsey estimates that some four hundred Indians from Western Canada served during the Great W...
Review of: Crimsoned Prairie: The Wars Between the United States and the Plains Indians During the W...
Despite steady interest in the wars on the American frontier during the last half of the nineteenth ...
John M. Coward\u27s study of newspapers and Native Americans could have been just another how the p...
Careful students of the American West have long realized that making valid generalizations about the...
The Indian War of 1864 provides the historian of the West with a wealth of sources, as one may imagi...
Review of: Let My People Know: American Indian Journalism, 1828-1978. Murphy, James E. and Murphy, S...
Arguing that the Indian Wars after the Civil War were the longest campaign ever waged by the United ...
Jerome Greene, a well known historian of the Indian War period, has written another important contri...
Review of: Soldiers West: Biographies from the Military Frontier. Hutton, Paul Andrew, ed
The U.S. Army excused the killing of one of its officers, Lt. Edward W. Casey, by Plenty Horses, an ...
As a community of scholars, we need to ask more from books like this. Despite a topic ripe with frui...
Review of: Wolves for the Blue Soldiers: Indian Scouts and Auxiliaries with the United States Army, ...
Few frontier military officers could claim a more varied and significant combat career during the se...