Showing posts with label american west. Show all posts
Showing posts with label american west. Show all posts

Don't Fence Me In: Images of the West Review

Don't Fence Me In: Images of the West
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Being raised in the lifestyle of dusty cowcamps located in Owyhee County, Idaho. I can truly appreciate and so will you, the realism and pride that David Stocklein has taken in compling this magnificient book. Photography and short stories of cowboy tradition, so real, you too, will wish you were a part of this unique and exciting land. Ira Walker, Chuck Hall, Herb Mink, Tom Hall and many more cowboys, will tell of family stories, first jobs, unique talents, special dogs, horses, mules and the people, who have made their lives interesting and memorable. This corner of the west has produced many fine men, you will get to know a few of them on a first hand basis. Gather round the fireplace, pull up a cozy chair and a light, as you will be reading through the dark hours. Once you pick up, "Don't Fence Me", you'll not put it down until your finished. At the end of the book, Stocklein includes closing pictures of assorted ranch families and cowboy groups. A final tribute to those who have rode their way through history atop a horse, all the while viewing Gods Country.

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This collection evokes the feeling of the west throughimages and stories of this incredibly beautiful and rugged landscape,it's flora, horses, cattle and people.Through a decade of photographyspanning ten Western states, Stoecklein depicts the modern-day cowboy atwork and at play, at sunrise, and sunset, in all kinds of weather.

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Jeff Davis's Own: Cavalry, Comanches, and the Battle for the Texas Frontier Review

Jeff Davis's Own: Cavalry, Comanches, and the Battle for the Texas Frontier
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Arnold has a gift for military history that while informative of facts is also a good read. He makes history interesting even to the casual reader. This book fills what is usually a gap in US military history and a blank in most accounts of R.E. Lees life. Who knew that Lee was an Indian fighter as well as hero of the Mexican American war and great American strategist. His account of Lee's personnel hand to hand fight with an Apache warrior reveals his personnel determination, courage, and humor is an insightful read. This is the second of many American military experience with insurgent, unconventional, gorilla warfare, others being the Seminole war in Florida, for that fact all the Indian wars, the War in the Philippines {part of the Spanish American war} Vietnam war, and now Iraq/Afghanistan. We win as long as we have the political will to do so. Enough of that. This is a really good book, I highly recommend it. A lot of info for a little known period in American Military History.

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Excitingly told and meticulously researched, this is an intriguing and colorful saga of the commanders who united to fight an enemy on its native ground, then divided again to face each other across the battlefields of their own homeland.

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The Santa Fe Trail: Its History, Legends, and Lore Review

The Santa Fe Trail: Its History, Legends, and Lore
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This is a very thoroughly researched book that tells the tale of the trail -- A commercial trail that linked the American frontier in Missouri with Spanish founded Santa Fe and points south.
The author tells the story from the time of Spanish settlement of Santa Fe through it's abandonment in the wake of the railroad. In its hay-day, the trail linked first two cultures and then the disparate parts of the western United States. The linkage was tenuous and strenuous. Traders took first pack mules then wagon trains through several hundred miles of prairie -- some of it bereft of water and all of it through Indian country.
This book mostly tells how trade bloomed along the trail from the 1820's through the 1860's. This economic detail is well fleshed out by the stories of the many characters that plied the trail or supported its existence. Interesting incidents and first person accounts are liberally strewn throughout the work and give this book its appeal -- otherwise it would be a subject as dry as the short fork to Santa Fe.
I was left with a sense of wonder at the risks these traders and travelers took -- particularly the early ones. Around 1810 -1820, most Americans who reached Santa Fe were rounded up and jailed -- some for five to eight years. Even in the era when the vast majority of early trail blazers failed to return to Missouri, there were always new would- be entrepreneurs ready to set out the next season. Such was the spirit of pioneering Americans and the lure of riches. Even after Spain/Mexico decided to welcome Americans in trade, there remained fairly high chances of succumbing to Indians, weather, or lack of water. The incredible perseverance and relentless pursuit of this open trade route is remarkable -- particularly to a reader of our era.
Although the subject is somewhat dry -- this is a story about economics and transportation -- the author does an admirable job of using interesting characters and stories from the trail to enliven the work.

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William Clark: Indian Diplomat Review

William Clark: Indian Diplomat
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William Clark, one half of the famous Lewis and Clark duo who crossed the continent to the Pacific, became one of the most important figures in antebellum America as an Indian agent, Missouri Territorial Governor, and Superintendent of Indian Affairs. His life provides a prism into the racial tensions prevalent in his day. More importantly, he is the central figure in Indian-white relations for nearly three decades and signed more treaties with Indian nations than any other American.

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For three decades following the expedition with Meriwether Lewis for which he is best known, William Clark forged a meritorious public career that contributed even more to the opening of the West: from 1807 to 1838 he served as the U.S. government's most important representative to western Indians. This biography focuses on Clark's tenure as Indian agent, territorial governor, and Superintendent of Indian Affairs at St. Louis.

Jay H. Buckley shows that Clark had immense influence on Indian-white relations in the trans-Mississippi region specifically and on federal Indian policy generally. As an agent of American expansion, Clark actively promoted the government factory system and the St. Louis fur trade and favored trade and friendship over military conflict. Clark was responsible for one-tenth of all Indian treaties ratified by the U.S. Senate. His first treaty in 1808 began Indian removal from what became Missouri Territory. His last treaty in 1836 completed the process, divesting Indians of the northwestern corner of Missouri. Although he sympathized with the Indians' fate and felt compassion for Native peoples, Clark was ultimately responsible for dispossessing more Indians than perhaps any other American.

Drawing on treaty documents and Clark's voluminous papers, Buckley analyzes apparent contradictions in Clark's relationship with Indians, fellow bureaucrats, and frontier entrepreneurs. He examines the choices Clark and his contemporaries made in formulating and implementing Indian policies and explores how Clark's paternalism as a slaveholder influenced his approach to dealing with Indians. Buckley also reveals the ambiguities and cross-purposes of Clark's policy making and his responses to such hostilities as the Black Hawk War.

William Clark: Indian Diplomat is the complex story of a sometimes sentimental, yet always pragmatic, imperialist. Buckley gives us a flawed but human hero who, in the realm of Indian affairs, had few equals among American diplomats.


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The Destruction of the Bison: An Environmental History, 1750-1920 (Studies in Environment and History) Review

The Destruction of the Bison: An Environmental History, 1750-1920 (Studies in Environment and History)
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Andrew Isenberg presents an array of complex and systemic causes that brought about the near extinction of the North American bison. The author's breadth of knowledge related to the bison demise is incredible. The reader is not bored with endless details behind these knowledge blocks, however. Rather, in fairly short order, the reader understands how climatology, geography, economics, sociology, migration and immigration, policy, and anthropology all played a role in the bison's destruction. And while the author presents an incredibily well researched description of the bison's destruction, along the way, the reader learns volumes about how Native Americans lived, changed their lifestyles, and were linked to the bison. The reference listings are impressive for those needing further information and authentication. Anyone interested in how the American plains were settled and shaped, this is an enjoyable read. For the researcher, this book is a gold mine.

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By Honor and Right: How One Man Boldly Defined the Destiny of a Nation Review

By Honor and Right: How One Man Boldly Defined the Destiny of a Nation
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I found By Honor and Right to be a most rewarding read. For me, the story presented by John C. Jackson was intriguing at three levels. First of all, the book provides background on an under-appreciated data point that would later re-enforce one of a series of tenuous U.S. territorial claims in our northern borderlands. In an exercise of connecting-the-dots, this involved a region that later filled in the northwest corner of the U.S. puzzle. The outcome, however, was not inevitable. In 1806 U.S. Army Captain John McClallen stepped out into the geo-strategic void that was left in the wake of the return of the Lewis & Clark Expedition to St. Louis. Circling wide to find a back door to Santa Fe in order to open up trade, McClallen found himself being the sole representative of the U.S. government in the northwest interior during the 1807-1808 period.McClallen had previously intercepted Lewis and Clark as they were heading downriver. They shared with their fellow officer the concern that the Montreal based Northwesters were becoming well entrenched on the upper Missouri. Furthermore, there was the imminent threat that this Canadian company represented beyond the continental divide. The following year, as the only U.S. authority present in the region, McClallen felt compelled to challenge David Thompson and his Canadians as they fanned out into the upper Columbia basin, to map and trap along the Kootenai, Pend Oreille, and Clark Fork tributaries. McClallen also had the good fortune to follow a band of Flatheads over the continental divide along a relatively easy crossing, instead of the almost fatal route that Lewis and Clark had taken with the Shoshone. Of comparative interest as well, much like Captain Bonneville a quarter of a century later, McClallen was on a leave of absence from the U.S. Army to conduct a private venture with strategic national implications. Coordinated through his commanding officer, General Wilkinson, this venture was to run in parallel with that of a better known official one under Lt. Zebulon Pike.
Secondly, amplifying on several of the points touched on above, at another level Jackson's book does a marvelous job of providing the reader with a sense of the ambiguity surrounding the conflicted national loyalties and interests rampant on the American frontier at this time. This is combined with what today would pass for incredible conflicts of interest, due to an overlapping of the public and private spheres. Thereby one acquires a new appreciation for the context in which the intrigues of Vice President Aaron Burr and General James Wilkinson occurred. Likewise, for Jackson's treatment of the ever shifting Indian alliances, and his highlighting of the magnitude of the role played by the French-Canadians of Missouri in the opening of the American West.
Then finally, among this latter group, there is one of the cast of characters that had accompanied Lewis & Clark only as far as the Mandan villages. As the Expedition was returning the following year, this individual opted to join up with Captain McClallen's venture to go back in. Like virtually all of McClallen's men in this American expedition, he spoke French, not English or Spanish. And of course he had never been to France. He was actually born in Quebec, Canada, his name being Francois Rivet. When Francois passed away 46 years later in 1852 in Oregon's French Prairie settlement in the Willamette Valley, he and his Indian wife Therese Tete Platte (Flathead) left behind a legacy of dozens of mixed-blood French and Salish speaking metis children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren. In the course of the 1850s, as a new order established itself in the low country, most of the Rivet descendants gradually headed back upriver to find refuge among their mother's people in the Flathead country of what is now western Montana. As one among a hundred or so similar metis settler families in the region south of the 49th parallel, the thousands of descendants of the Rivet clan alone constitute one of the largest and oldest families currently inhabiting the repopulated Pacific Northwest.
In conclusion, to any prospective reader of By Honor and Right, I would offer one warning. If you prefer to read conventional versions of history that `keep it real simple,' and don't challenge us a bit, then I would recommend against tackling this book.
Robert Foxcurran
Pacific Northwest Historians Guild President

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