Military History of the West
Vol. 23 (Spring 1993), No. 1
"Military Officers' Views of Indian Scouts, 1865-1890," by Paul N. Beck, pp. 1-19
ABSTRACT: The post-Civil War U.S. Army used Indian scouts extensively.
Different officers held different views of their abilities, courage, and
trustworthiness. Officers rarely mentioned any Indians by name in their
reports, often applied racist stereotypes to various tribes, and in
general did not believe that Indians scouts were as good as white scouts.
KEY WORDS: Indians, scouts, frontier, U.S. Army
"Thirty Years After the Cuban Missile Crisis: An Eastern New Mexico Missile Base Retrospective," by Terry Isaacs, pp. 21-38
ABSTRACT: During the Cuban Missile Crisis, the missile bases in New Mexico
became operational. Missile combat crews had confidence in themselves but
not necessarily in the Atlas missiles stored precariously in underground
silos. Some accidents occurred. Alert status increased morale, which had
been very low.
KEY WORDS: Cold War, New Mexico, missiles, civil defense
"Wearing Army Blue (and Green, and Red, and Gray . . .) During the Mexican War," by James M. McCaffrey, pp. 39-45
ABSTRACT: Volunteers for the Mexican War asserted their individualism by
their uniforms. Volunteer militias and regiments could choose their own
uniforms, and most groups wanted to contrast as much as possible with
regular army wear. When privately purchased clothing wore out during the
war, it was difficult to replace.
KEY WORDS: Mexican War, uniforms, volunteers, militia
"The Mexican War Journal of John James Dix: A Texian," ed. Dan R. Manning, pp. 47-74
ABSTRACT: John James Dix came to Texas in 1834. As a young man he served
the U.S. in the Mexican War behind the scenes in Texas. He kept a journal
from 1847 to 1848, recording his experiences in Corpus Christi and in the
Quartermaster Corps. Mostly he was bored and lonely, though he worked
conscientiously as a supplier to the soldiers.
KEY WORDS: Mexican War, Texas, quartermaster, sutler