Volume 26, No. 2, Fall 1996
Table of Contents
"Army Politics and Indian Wars: Charles B. Gatewood and the Geronimo Campaign of 1886," by Adam Kane, pp. 109-28.
ABSTRACT: Charles B. Gatewood, an important figure during the last of the
Apache wars, helped establish peace in the Southwest by persuading
Geronimo to surrender in 1886. While those around him received
promotions, he remained a first lieutenant, due to the character of the
frontier army and his own physical ailments.
KEY WORDS: Charles B. Gatewood; 1886 Geronimo Campaign; frontier military;
army politics
"It is beef every day . . .': The Army Ration and the Enlisted Man, 1865-1890," by David L. Wheeler and William H. Landis, pp. 129-57.
ABSTRACT: Analysis of the enlisted man's ration shows it to have been
deficient in foods essential to good nutrition. Various means
authorized to procure food to supplement the ration proved inadequate or
undependable. Improvement came with increased awareness of the
importance of variety in diet and with the advent of railroads.
KEY WORDS: U.S. Army; diet; Great Plains; nutrition; ration
"Indians in the Army: Professional Advocacy and the Regularization of Indian Military Service, 1889-1897," by Clifford P. Coppersmith, pp. 159-85.
ABSTRACT: This essay examines the role that a developing officer corps
played in the discussion of the military assimilation of Indians into
American society. These officers' progressive ideals combined with
European concepts of the military use of aboriginal peoples to bring
about the experiment with Indian soldiers in the closing decade of the
nineteenth century.
KEY WORDS: U.S. Army; military policy; Native Americans;
professionalization
"Strategic Dilemma: Civil-Military Friction and the Texas Coastal Campaign of 1863," by Kurt Henry Hackemer, pp. 187-214.
ABSTRACT: Early in the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln and his
military advisors agreed on the Union's basic strategy for the
Department of the Gulf. After the French invaded Mexico, Lincoln's
priorities changed. General Halleck did not agree and stressed military
utility over Lincoln's new strategy, raising interesting questions about
civilian control of the military.
KEY WORDS: Civil War; Nathaniel Banks; Henry Halleck; civil-military
relations; grand strategy