The Second Seminole War and the Limits of American Aggression by C.S. Monaco is an important book on an often-neglected topic. The last monograph by an academic historian on this conflict of Florida Indian Removal, John K. Mahon’s History of the Second Seminole War, has been in print for over fifty years. While Mahon focused narrowly on elite politics and military strategy, Monaco employs settler-colonial theory to interpret the Florida war’s effects on antebellum American society as a whole. This book will draw interest from specialists in military, imperial, and Native American history
Five days after Christmas in 1837, Brigadier General Thomas Sidney Jesup wrote a letter to Colonel Z...
The news that the Seminoles had begun hostilities in Florida spread slowly early in January, 1836. T...
Between 1750 and 1810, the Muskogee Indians held the upper hand in intercolonial affairs and made Fl...
Daniel Scallet, The Second Seminole War, the Ad Hoc Origins of American Imperialism, and the Silenc...
There was no one basic cause of the Second Seminole War which began in Florida in December 1835. Maj...
This thesis examines the involvement, leadership, and impact of the Black Seminoles during the Secon...
Recent scholarship has put the Second Seminole War in its proper place as one of the most dramatic e...
The North American Southeast remained a wild borderland where Indian tribes, the United States, Spai...
The Second Seminole War comprised the single most significant event of Florida’s territorial period....
Thesis (PhD) - Indiana University, History, 2007This thesis examines the involvement, leadership, an...
The Seminole War. - The treaty negotiated with the Florida tribes of Indians at Moultrie Creek, Sept...
Confederate Florida, far removed from the clash of massed armies to its north, remained in many resp...
Historians have traditionally viewed the “Creek War of 1836” as a minor police action centered on ro...
This thesis argues that Florida\u27s natural environment was one of the United States Army\u27s most...
Recently, the focus on slavery within native societies has benfited from a great deal of scholarly a...
Five days after Christmas in 1837, Brigadier General Thomas Sidney Jesup wrote a letter to Colonel Z...
The news that the Seminoles had begun hostilities in Florida spread slowly early in January, 1836. T...
Between 1750 and 1810, the Muskogee Indians held the upper hand in intercolonial affairs and made Fl...
Daniel Scallet, The Second Seminole War, the Ad Hoc Origins of American Imperialism, and the Silenc...
There was no one basic cause of the Second Seminole War which began in Florida in December 1835. Maj...
This thesis examines the involvement, leadership, and impact of the Black Seminoles during the Secon...
Recent scholarship has put the Second Seminole War in its proper place as one of the most dramatic e...
The North American Southeast remained a wild borderland where Indian tribes, the United States, Spai...
The Second Seminole War comprised the single most significant event of Florida’s territorial period....
Thesis (PhD) - Indiana University, History, 2007This thesis examines the involvement, leadership, an...
The Seminole War. - The treaty negotiated with the Florida tribes of Indians at Moultrie Creek, Sept...
Confederate Florida, far removed from the clash of massed armies to its north, remained in many resp...
Historians have traditionally viewed the “Creek War of 1836” as a minor police action centered on ro...
This thesis argues that Florida\u27s natural environment was one of the United States Army\u27s most...
Recently, the focus on slavery within native societies has benfited from a great deal of scholarly a...
Five days after Christmas in 1837, Brigadier General Thomas Sidney Jesup wrote a letter to Colonel Z...
The news that the Seminoles had begun hostilities in Florida spread slowly early in January, 1836. T...
Between 1750 and 1810, the Muskogee Indians held the upper hand in intercolonial affairs and made Fl...