Finding Citizenship in the American West: California’s “Native Cavalry Who maintained control of the far West for the Union during the Civil War, as the bulk of the Union Army clashed with the Confederacy in the East? In Californio Lancers, Tom Prezelski seeks to answer this questi...
Soldiers in the Southwest Borderlands explores the diversity of western soldiers, their service and ...
Prior to the start of the Civil War, California had been a state for less than a dozen years and was...
The Proving Ground for Civil War Leaders Historians have wondered what effect the Mexican War may h...
Battling in the Desert Preparing for the Future Unless one is a scholar of American military histo...
From 1846 to 1866, the United States expanded national power in the West while confirming it in the ...
Answering the Call of Duty in the New Mexico Territory As part of its elaborate plan to win a decisi...
Wars for Empire employs the framework of settler colonialism to argue that war and violence in the A...
Cavalry in New Mexico and Arizona. [2436] Hostilities of the Chiricahua Apaches under the leadership...
Combat on the Frontier: Texas Cavalry from the Colonial Period to the Civil War Era Nathan A. Jennin...
Excerpt from Cavalrymen and their Horses during the American Indian Wars. From 1866 to 1891, ten U...
Migration to Mexico Ex-Confederates moved from one Civil War to another Most Civil War readers a...
<p>From 1861 to 1867 the diverse peoples—Indian, Hispano, and Anglo—of the Southwest borderlands str...
Studies of Civil War history relative to the Trans-Mississippi West are not as extensive as for othe...
Daniel Gonzales examines the U.S. Calvary and its origins at Jefferson Barracks, and suggests that i...
This project is about the California Civil War Centennial Commission’s (CWCC) articulation of Califo...
Soldiers in the Southwest Borderlands explores the diversity of western soldiers, their service and ...
Prior to the start of the Civil War, California had been a state for less than a dozen years and was...
The Proving Ground for Civil War Leaders Historians have wondered what effect the Mexican War may h...
Battling in the Desert Preparing for the Future Unless one is a scholar of American military histo...
From 1846 to 1866, the United States expanded national power in the West while confirming it in the ...
Answering the Call of Duty in the New Mexico Territory As part of its elaborate plan to win a decisi...
Wars for Empire employs the framework of settler colonialism to argue that war and violence in the A...
Cavalry in New Mexico and Arizona. [2436] Hostilities of the Chiricahua Apaches under the leadership...
Combat on the Frontier: Texas Cavalry from the Colonial Period to the Civil War Era Nathan A. Jennin...
Excerpt from Cavalrymen and their Horses during the American Indian Wars. From 1866 to 1891, ten U...
Migration to Mexico Ex-Confederates moved from one Civil War to another Most Civil War readers a...
<p>From 1861 to 1867 the diverse peoples—Indian, Hispano, and Anglo—of the Southwest borderlands str...
Studies of Civil War history relative to the Trans-Mississippi West are not as extensive as for othe...
Daniel Gonzales examines the U.S. Calvary and its origins at Jefferson Barracks, and suggests that i...
This project is about the California Civil War Centennial Commission’s (CWCC) articulation of Califo...
Soldiers in the Southwest Borderlands explores the diversity of western soldiers, their service and ...
Prior to the start of the Civil War, California had been a state for less than a dozen years and was...
The Proving Ground for Civil War Leaders Historians have wondered what effect the Mexican War may h...