Military History of the Southwest
Volume 20 (Spring 1990), No. 1
"'Dismembering the Confederacy': Jefferson Davis and the Trans-Mississippi West," by Steven E. Woodworth, pp. 1-22
ABSTRACT: The Trans-Mississippi West had already been cut off from
the rest of the Confederacy long before Vicksburg fell. Because
Jefferson Davis headquartered in Richmond, he paid little attention
to the rest of the Confederacy. Internal dissent by Trans-
Mississippi generals and Davis's reluctance to act weakened the
command structure in the west. General Edmund Kirby Smith was only
part of the problem.
KEY WORDS: Civil War, Trans-Mississippi West, Jefferson Davis,
Edmund Kirby Smith
"Stage Soldiers of the Southwest: New Mexico's Four Minute Men of World War I," by Richard Melzer, pp. 23-42
ABSTRACT: The Four Minute Men were the most effective form of
propaganda in New Mexico during World War I. Local professional men
with good public speaking skills addressed movie audiences with
four-minute speeches before the main feature. They stirred the
audiences' patriotism, encouraged enlistment and the buying of
Liberty Bonds, and discouraged pro-German sentiment.
KEY WORDS: World War I, Four Minute Men, New Mexico, propaganda
"Reality Revisited: Will Rogers' Support of Military Aviation," by S. Fred Roach, pp. 43-60
ABSTRACT: Will Rogers actively supported the growth of military
aviation in the 1920s and 1930s. He championed flyers who pushed
the limits of aviation and who set new records. He, along with
General Billy Mitchell, knew that the success of the next war
would depend on air power. Billy Mitchell was court-martialed for
his controversial crusade to expand the role of the air force in
the military.
KEY WORDS: Will Rogers, Billy Mitchell, military aviation, Air
Force
"'Bully for Flournoy's Regiment, We Are Some Punkins, You'll Bet': The Civil War Letters of Virgil Sullivan Rabb, Captain, Company 'I,' Sixteenth Texas Infantry, C.S.A," Part Two, edited by Thomas W. Cutrer, pp. 61-96
ABSTRACT: Letters home, mostly to his mother, of a Confederate
infantryman. He described conditions of army life and directed
family at home to take care of his affairs. Health, diet, clothing
and rumors fill the letters, but he also asked family to
send him money so he could buy slaves.
KEY WORDS: Civil War, Texas, Trans-Mississippi, letters, army life