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Paperback The Blue, the Gray and the Red Book

ISBN: 1684424534

ISBN13: 9781684424535

The Blue, the Gray and the Red

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Book Overview

The Blue, the Gray, and the Red is the first book dedicated solely to chronicling the numerous campaigns waged against the Indians in the American West during the Civil War. In fact, more Indians were killed between 1861 and 1865 than in any other period in history. Some of the most noteworthy Indian Campaigns ever conducted, featuring a fascinating cast of larger than life characters, took place during these years.

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This may be the first work dedicated solely to chronicling the numerous campaigns waged against the Indians in the West during the War Between the States, 1861-1865. Perhaps more Indians - and possibly more Americans - were killed during this time period than any other comparable four year period of the Indian Wars in our history. Yet most Americans are quite ignorant of all that transpired in these Indian campaigns no doubt due to the overarching dominance of that most sanguinary other War. Both Confederate and Federal soldiers had to maintain two front wars - against each other and the Indians. In each nation manpower drains for the main war were such that all too often the campaigns for frontier survival were fought with untrained and inexperienced militia. The Indians comprehended all of this and many acted with great mischief. Concomitantly the War Between the States also divided the loyalties of many tribes with organized units fighting for both the Confederacy (who had Indian nations' representatives in their congress with the intention of eventually bringing them in as their own states) and the Union. We must not lose sight of the fact that the last commissioned general in the Confederacy to surrender was Cherokee chief Brigadier General Stand Watie on 23 June 1865. Although this well written eminently readable book fills in a much needed gap in understanding our history of the many campaigns with the various Indian tribes during this time period, it is woefully lacking more in its analysis and descriptions of the campaigns in the Confederacy. There are only several paragraphs outlining these skirmishes and battles. The title of this work certainly suggests more than what is provided. Much has yet to be researched and written hereon. And, we know that there were many fights worth relating with the Indians on the "Southron" frontier. See, e.g., BOURLAND IN NORTH TEXAS AND INDIAN TERRITORY DURING THE CIVIL WAR: Fort Cobb, Fort Arbuckle & The Wichita Mountains, by Patricia Adkins-Rochette (2006). For the open-minded researcher, this is a field of history still in dire need! Nonetheless, those campaigns described are fascinating. The author leads us through several of the bloody battles between partisan Indian tribes during the War Between the States explaining the politics of it all (this is well done - it can be most confusing) with the consequences to each side. Even history enthusiasts for the War are frequently uninformed with reference to the fratricidal intra-Indian campaigns. He then goes into the several Apache campaigns, the Great Sioux Uprising of 1862 in Minnesota wherein scores of quite innocent newly arrived German immigrants were massacred and worse, the Bear River Massacre, the Woolsey Expedition, Northern and Southern Plains vengeance, and ultimately the woeful Sand Creek Massacre. Of note, the Sioux War of 1862 caused the burning of much of the town of New Ulm - 190 houses, and culminated after severa

While interest focused on the East

Exacerbated by broken treaties, all across the West tensions and conflict arose between Indians and the steady, inexorable march West of white settlers. During the Civil War years, civilians and troops (mostly Blue) failed to solve the problem on multiple miniature battlefields. This book does an excellent job of describing the specific conditions and repercussions in nine areas where Indians attempted to maintain their traditional lifestyle.

An often-overlooked sidebar of the American Civil War

The Blue, The Gray, & The Red: Indian Campaigns Of The Civil War by western historian Thom Hatch focuses on an often-overlooked sidebar of the American Civil War -- the western campaigns that took place during the years of 1861 to 1865 and which resulted in the deaths of more Native Americans than in any other historical period of United States history. Heavily researched and superbly presented, The Blue, The Gray, & The Red is a much-appreciated and strongly recommended addition to Civil War Studies and Native American Studies reference collections and supplemental reading lists.
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