Slightly more than a century ago the dreaded Comanche Moon of each month virtually assured devastating Indian raids upon the isolated ranches of Texas\u27 northwestern frontier. No issue raised more ire in the state legislature or produced more animosity between state and federal officials than did this. To protect these exposed settlements, the War Department established a thin line of military posts from the Red River to the Rio Grande. Anchoring the northern zone was Fort Richardson, established in 1866 with a garrison to patrol the upper Brazos River country and to turn back raiding parties of Comanches and Kiowas from the Fort Sill Agency in southwestern Indian Territory. Initial plans for the construction of a well-ordered stone com...
The Army established Fort Robinson near the source of the White River on the Pine Ridge in northwest...
Combat on the Frontier: Texas Cavalry from the Colonial Period to the Civil War Era Nathan A. Jennin...
Major General Winfield Scott Hancock headed west from Fort Riley in late March of 1867, well prepare...
Slightly more than a century ago the dreaded Comanche Moon of each month virtually assured devasta...
Slightly more than a century ag9 the dreaded Comanche Moon of each month virtually assured devasta...
This paperback, with a new introduction, reprints Carriker\u27s 1970 text chronicling Fort Supply fr...
The Red River War of 1874-75—also known as the Buffalo War after its principal cause, the invasion o...
At opposite ends of the Great Plains, the North-West Mounted Police and the Texas Rangers emerged in...
F. Todd Smith\u27s work provides the first detailed history of the Indians of Texas and the Near Sou...
Jeff Barnes\u27s book presents brief histories and the historical importance of about fifty military...
In the annals of American westward expansion in the nineteenth century, few locations stand out more...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
During the summer of 1857, Colonel Edwin Vos Sumner and his troops invaded Cheyenne and Arapaho land...
A prolific writer on the Southern Plains and the people who have lived in the region, Stan Hoig focu...
The Comanches were the only tribe from the Pacific side of the Continental Divide to carve out a per...
The Army established Fort Robinson near the source of the White River on the Pine Ridge in northwest...
Combat on the Frontier: Texas Cavalry from the Colonial Period to the Civil War Era Nathan A. Jennin...
Major General Winfield Scott Hancock headed west from Fort Riley in late March of 1867, well prepare...
Slightly more than a century ago the dreaded Comanche Moon of each month virtually assured devasta...
Slightly more than a century ag9 the dreaded Comanche Moon of each month virtually assured devasta...
This paperback, with a new introduction, reprints Carriker\u27s 1970 text chronicling Fort Supply fr...
The Red River War of 1874-75—also known as the Buffalo War after its principal cause, the invasion o...
At opposite ends of the Great Plains, the North-West Mounted Police and the Texas Rangers emerged in...
F. Todd Smith\u27s work provides the first detailed history of the Indians of Texas and the Near Sou...
Jeff Barnes\u27s book presents brief histories and the historical importance of about fifty military...
In the annals of American westward expansion in the nineteenth century, few locations stand out more...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
During the summer of 1857, Colonel Edwin Vos Sumner and his troops invaded Cheyenne and Arapaho land...
A prolific writer on the Southern Plains and the people who have lived in the region, Stan Hoig focu...
The Comanches were the only tribe from the Pacific side of the Continental Divide to carve out a per...
The Army established Fort Robinson near the source of the White River on the Pine Ridge in northwest...
Combat on the Frontier: Texas Cavalry from the Colonial Period to the Civil War Era Nathan A. Jennin...
Major General Winfield Scott Hancock headed west from Fort Riley in late March of 1867, well prepare...