Horse Soldier, 1881-1916

Horse Soldier, 1881-1916
Title Horse Soldier, 1881-1916 PDF eBook
Author Randy Steffen
Publisher
Total Pages 280
Release 1992-10
Genre History
ISBN 9780806123943

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Depicts the uniforms, insignia, decorations, horse equipment, and weaponry of cavalry regiments against the background of events in American military history

The Horse Soldier, 1776-1943

The Horse Soldier, 1776-1943
Title The Horse Soldier, 1776-1943 PDF eBook
Author Randy Steffen
Publisher
Total Pages 268
Release 1978-01-01
Genre Political Science
ISBN 9780806114514

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Depicts the uniforms, insignia, decorations, horse equipment, and weaponry of cavalry regiments against the background of events in American military history

The Horse Soldier, 1776-1943: The last of the Indian wars, the Spanish-American War, the brink of the Great War, 1881-1916

The Horse Soldier, 1776-1943: The last of the Indian wars, the Spanish-American War, the brink of the Great War, 1881-1916
Title The Horse Soldier, 1776-1943: The last of the Indian wars, the Spanish-American War, the brink of the Great War, 1881-1916 PDF eBook
Author Randy Steffen
Publisher
Total Pages
Release 1979
Genre
ISBN 9780806112831

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Soldier, Surgeon, Scholar

Soldier, Surgeon, Scholar
Title Soldier, Surgeon, Scholar PDF eBook
Author William Henry Corbusier
Publisher University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages 266
Release 2003
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9780806135496

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"An ethnographer and ethnologist, Corbusier published studies of the languages and cultures of the Yavapai, the Sioux, and the Shoshoni. His memoir records his observations on American Indian dances and ceremonies and his medical treatment of prominent figures, such as Sarah Winnemucca, Red Cloud, and American Horse."--BOOK JACKET.

Soldiers and Their Horses

Soldiers and Their Horses
Title Soldiers and Their Horses PDF eBook
Author Jane Flynn
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 168
Release 2020-01-14
Genre History
ISBN 1000030385

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The soldier-horse relationship was nurtured by The British Army because it made the soldier and his horse into an effective fighting unit. Soldiers and their Horses explores a complex relationship forged between horses and humans in extreme conditions. As both a social history of Britain in the early twentieth century and a history of the British Army, Soldiers and their Horses reconciles the hard pragmatism of war with the imaginative and emotional. By carefully overlapping the civilian and the military, by juxtaposing "sense" and "sentimentality," and by considering institutional policy alongside individual experience, the soldier and his horse are re-instated as co-participators in The Great War. Soldiers and their Horses provides a valuable contribution to current thinking about the role of horses in history.

Nature's Army

Nature's Army
Title Nature's Army PDF eBook
Author Harvey Meyerson
Publisher University Press of Kansas
Total Pages 368
Release 2020-04-15
Genre History
ISBN 0700629505

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Blessings on Uncle Sam’s soldiers! They have done their job well, and every pine tree is waving its arms for joy.–John Muir Muir’s words and this book both celebrate a crucial but largely forgotten episode in our nation’s history—how a generation prior to the creation of a National Park Service, the US Army ran Yosemite National Park in an unusual alliance with the fabled preservationist John Muir and his Sierra Club. Harvey Meyerson brings that largely forgotten episode in our nation’s history to life and uses it as a touchstone for a reconsideration of a century of civilian-military cooperation in environmental protection and infrastructure construction whose impact and relevance still resonate. Despite the worldwide renown and popularity of Yosemite National Park, few people know that its first stewards were drawn from the so-called Old Army. From 1890 until the establishment of the National Park Service in 1916, these soldiers proved to be extremely competent and farsighted wilderness managers. Meyerson recaptures the forgotten history of these early environmentalists and how they set significant standards for the future oversight of our national parks. The army, Meyerson suggests, had actually been well prepared to assume this stewardship. During its first hundred years—and despite the interruptions of warfare—its soldiers had crisscrossed the American landscape, preparing maps and writing detailed reports describing climate, weather, physical terrain, ecosystems, and the diverse flora and fauna populating the lands they explored and often protected during an era of wide-open exploitation of natural resources. Such experience made the army better suited than any other federal agency to oversee the early national parks system. Combining environmental, military, political, and cultural history, Meyerson’s study is especially timely in light of Yosemite’s enormous popularity (four million visitors annually) and recent controversies pitting conservation forces against dam builders and proponents of expanded public access.

The Old Army in the Big Bend of Texas

The Old Army in the Big Bend of Texas
Title The Old Army in the Big Bend of Texas PDF eBook
Author Thomas Ty Smith
Publisher Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages 352
Release 2018-01-30
Genre History
ISBN 1625110480

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Even before Pancho Villa’s 1916 raid on Columbus, New Mexico, and the following punitive expedition under General John J. Pershing, the U.S. Army was strengthening its presence on the southwestern border in response to the Mexican Revolution of 1910. Manning forty-one small outposts along a three-hundred mile stretch of the Rio Grande region, the army remained for a decade, rotating eighteen different regiments, primarily cavalry, until the return of relative calm. The remote, rugged, and desolate terrain of the Big Bend defied even the technological advances of World War I, and it remained very much a cavalry and pack mule operation until the outposts were finally withdrawn in 1921. With The Old Army in the Big Bend of Texas: The Last Cavalry Frontier, 1911–1921, Thomas T. “Ty” Smith, one of Texas’s leading military historians, has delved deep into the records of the U.S. Army to provide an authoritative portrait, richly complemented by many photos published here for the first time, of the final era of soldiers on horseback in the American West.