Peacekeeping on the Plains: Army Operations in Bleeding KansasUniversity of Missouri Press, 2004 - 278 Seiten "Historians have written on "Bleeding Kansas" and on the frontier army as a constabulary force, but little scholarship exists on how the army performed its peacekeeping operations in the 1850s. In Peacekeeping on the Plains, Tony R. Mullis is one of the first scholars to detail the military concerns associated with peace enforcement in Kansas and the trans-Missouri West." "Between 1854 and 1856, the Franklin Pierce administration called upon the U.S. Army to conduct a series of peace operations in the newly formed Kansas and Nebraska territories. The army responded to the president's call by successfully completing a mission against the Lakota Sioux in 1855 and by aiding civil authorities in the imposition of peace among competing factions in Kansas during 1856." "Although these police duties were not always popular with the soldiers that conducted them, the purpose behind them remained constant - the maintenance of peace, order, and security. Given Americans' misgivings about a standing army and their limited expectations for it as a domestic peacekeeper, its use in this fashion during the 1850s was a delicate proposition." "By drawing on diverse sources, including official army correspondence, personal papers of key military and political leaders, and local accounts of army activities, Mullis shows how peace operations were conducted by the U.S. Army long before the second half of the twentieth century. He also presents a thorough analysis of the professional dilemmas confronted by army officers, as well as the delicate command and control issues associated with the different types of peace operations." "Mullis's assessment of the army's peacekeeping efforts in the mid-1850s offers a full understanding of the constraints and frustrations involved. Many of the dilemmas faced by the army in Kansas parallel those encountered in various spots around the globe today. |
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Seite xvi
... received from the staffs of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library and the Historical Society of Pennsyl- vania as well. I am also deeply indebted to the fine folks at the University of Missouri Press. Special thanks go to Clair ...
... received from the staffs of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library and the Historical Society of Pennsyl- vania as well. I am also deeply indebted to the fine folks at the University of Missouri Press. Special thanks go to Clair ...
Seite 13
... received the authority to choose between militia forces and regular troops. Congress passed a law in 1807 that gave the chief execu- tive such an option.9 After 1807, the commander-in-chief of the armed forces could use whichever ...
... received the authority to choose between militia forces and regular troops. Congress passed a law in 1807 that gave the chief execu- tive such an option.9 After 1807, the commander-in-chief of the armed forces could use whichever ...
Seite 15
... coastal defense and the Indian problem as the key American security issues in the first part of the nineteenth century. 15. House Joint Resolution No. 27, Washington Territory, Letters Received Great Expectations, Limited Resources 15.
... coastal defense and the Indian problem as the key American security issues in the first part of the nineteenth century. 15. House Joint Resolution No. 27, Washington Territory, Letters Received Great Expectations, Limited Resources 15.
Seite 16
... Received Adjutant Generals Office (LRAGO), RG-94, National Archive and Records Administration (NARA), M567, Roll 572; for an example of an emigrant escort request, see Major Cady to Major Page, May 5, 1854, Records of the United States ...
... Received Adjutant Generals Office (LRAGO), RG-94, National Archive and Records Administration (NARA), M567, Roll 572; for an example of an emigrant escort request, see Major Cady to Major Page, May 5, 1854, Records of the United States ...
Seite 17
... received escorts when required. Building bridges throughout Kansas was dangerous enough without the threat of Indian attack. Federal officials who traveled across the plains asked for and normally received escorts along their travel ...
... received escorts when required. Building bridges throughout Kansas was dangerous enough without the threat of Indian attack. Federal officials who traveled across the plains asked for and normally received escorts along their travel ...
Inhalt
1 | |
9 | |
35 | |
The Sioux Expedition of 1855 | 61 |
Harney and the Peace of Fort Pierre | 86 |
Peace Land and Speculation | 119 |
Peacekeeping and Command Control Communications | 153 |
Kansas on the Precipice of Civil War | 194 |
John Geary the Army | 220 |
Conclusion | 234 |
Epilogue | 245 |
Bibliography | 251 |
Index | 273 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Peacekeeping on the Plains: Army Operations in Bleeding Kansas Tony R. Mullis Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2004 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
1st sess 2nd sess 33rd Cong 34th Cong actions American army’s associated August authority Bleeding Kansas Brulé Buchanan citizens civil command complete page image Congress Cooke Davis's December Delaware Democrats Department election emigrants Executive Document 50 federal troops Fort Laramie Fort Leavenworth Fort Riley free staters Geary Geary's governor Harney Harney’s History House Executive Document Ibid Indian agents issue Jefferson Davis July Kansas-Nebraska Act KSHS Transactions Lakota land speculation Laramie Lawrence Leavenworth Lecompton legislature Louis Republican LRAGO Manypenny Marcy military force militia Missouri Montgomery Nebraska party Pawnee peace enforcement operations peace operations peacekeeping Pierce administration Pierce’s political popular sovereignty president pro-slavery protect Reeder Riley Roll sacking of Lawrence Secretary Senate Executive Document September serial settlers Shannon Sioux Sioux expedition slavery slavery extension Smith squatters telegram telegraph territorial tion Topeka Topeka Legislature treaty U.S. Army United Wakarusa War Washington West Wilson Shannon Woodson