1st Edition

The Vistas of American Military History 1800-1898

Edited By Dr Brian Holden-Reid, Joseph G Dawson III Copyright 2007
    198 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    A team of leading American military historians here investigate the factors that shaped the United States Army in the nineteenth century.

    Throwing new light on its history, this deeply researched book explores a mulitplicity of themes. These include the social structure, command system and relationship with civil power which are all important in assessing its efficiency and behaviour in war; and the way the army is depicted in military literature and cinema which affects its social portrait.

    Deliberately exploring neglected themes, this key work includes discussion on:

    * the roles of the many volunteer colonels in the Mexican War, 1846-48
    * Robert Wettemann and the alleged 'isolation' of the US Army in the nineteenth century
    * John Ford's famous 'cavalry trilogy' of motion pictures.

    Containing so much food for thought, for students of US history and military history this is an entertaining as well as instructional book.

    1. The Vistas of American Military History PART 1: GENERAL THEMES 2. The Commanding Generals and the Question of Civil Control in the Antebellum U.S. Army 3. John M. Schofield and the 'Multipurpose' Army 4. A Part or Apart: The Alleged Isolation of Antebellum U.S. Army Officers PART 2: SPECIAL SUBJECTS 5. How the Army Became Accepted: West Point Socialization, Military Accountability, and the Nation-State During the Jacksonian Era 6. Leaders for Manifest Destiny: American Volunteer Colonels Serving in the U.S.-Mexican War 7. Soldier of the Pen: The Literary Careers of Richard Taylor, John Bell Hood, and W. H. Tunnard 8. 'Romantic, isn't it, Miss Dandridge?': Sources and Meanings of John Ford's Cavalry Trilogy

    Biography

    Dr Brian Holden-Reid, Joseph G Dawson III