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Native North American History, United States History - Western, Plains & Rocky Mountain Region, United States History - Southern Region, United States History - Frontier & Indian Wars, U.S. Armed Forces - Biography, United States History - 19th Century -
Ranald S. Mackenzie on the Texas Frontier by Ernest Wallace β€” book cover

Ranald S. Mackenzie on the Texas Frontier

by Ernest Wallace, David J. Murrah
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Overview

Once called the "Fighting Colonel" of the Texas frontier, Ranald S. Mackenzie in the brief years of his career through the 1870s and early 1880s secured that land for the surging wave of settlers who turned the wilderness into a place of cattle ranches, productive farms, and prosperous towns. In this classic account of the dashing cavalryman's campaigns, first published in limited numbers in 1965, eminent historian Ernest Wallace brought to life an era of the frontier that continues to intrigue readers.

Mackenzie, after achieving an amazing record during the Civil War, rode onto the unexplored Southern Plains as commander of the 4th Cavalry, assigned to drive the Comanche and Kiowa tribes from their favorite hunting and camping grounds. These campaigns, along with his strikes across the Rio Grande to stop Apaches and Mexican Kickapoos from raiding across the border, won for him the respect and admiration of his superiors and subordinates alike and the plaudits of the Texans of his day.

In eloquent prose, Wallace presented his careful research on Mackenzie's military career in a way that illuminated the period and its ethos. David J. Murrah, in his introduction to the 1993 edition, places this important volume within the corpus of Wallace's work on Texas history. He rightly claims that "the action-filled narrative represents Ernest Wallace at his best."

About the Author, Ernest Wallace

DAVID J. MURRAH is well known as a historian of West Texas. A native of Gruver, located in the Texas Panhandle, Murrah has authored or edited six other books, including C.C. Slaughter: Rancher, Banker, Baptist and Lubbock and the South Plains: An Illustrated History. He currently serves as senior historian for Southwest Museum Services in Houston and makes his home on the Texas coast in Rockport.

The late Ernest Wallace enjoyed an illustrious career as a professor of history at Texas Tech University, where he was named one of the original Horn Professors, a designation indicating outstanding distinction. During his fifty years there, he produced eleven major books, including two volumes of Mackenzie's official correspondence, the classic The Comanches: Lords of the South Plains (with E. Adamson Hoebel), Texas in Turmoil, 1849-1875, and The Howling of the Coyotes: Reconstruction Efforts to Divide Texas, published by Texas A&M University Press.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Mackenzie, a Union soldier, distinguished himself in the Civil War before moving west as commander of the Fourth Cavalry. In Texas, he led the move to drive the Comanches and Kiowas off the plains to make room for the coming settlers. This edition of the book, originally published in limited numbers by the West Texas Museum Association in 1965, contains a new introduction on author Wallace. Though the genocide of American Indians is viewed differently today, this volume has a place in all American history collections.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 1993
Publisher
Texas A&M University Press
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780890964873

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