By James C. Bradford

Content material:
Chapter 1 battle throughout the Colonial period, 1607–1765 (pages 7–21): John Grenier
Chapter 2 struggle of yank Independence, 1775–83 (pages 22–38): Stephen R. Conway
Chapter three overseas Wars of the Early Republic, 1798–1816 (pages 39–58): Gene Allen Smith
Chapter four Indian Wars within the East, 1783–1859 (pages 59–72): Roger L. Nichols
Chapter five The Texas struggle for Independence and battle with Mexico (pages 73–98): Thomas W. Cutrer
Chapter 6 The Civil struggle, 1861–5 (pages 99–122): Brian Holden Reid
Chapter 7 Indian Wars of the Trans?Mississippi West, 1862–90 (pages 123–138): Robert Wooster
Chapter eight The Spanish–American and Philippine Wars, 1898–1902 (pages 139–152): Graham A. Cosmas
Chapter nine the USA Emergent: the USA within the nice battle (pages 153–172): Aaron Anderson and Michael Neiberg
Chapter 10 international battle II within the Atlantic, North Africa, the Mediterranean, and Europe (pages 173–193): Harold R. Winton
Chapter eleven global conflict II in Asia and the Pacific (pages 194–221): John Wukovits
Chapter 12 The Korean battle (pages 222–256): James I. Matray
Chapter thirteen The Vietnam battle (pages 257–271): Dr Ron Milam
Chapter 14 The chilly conflict (pages 272–283): Elizabeth Lutes Hillman
Chapter 15 The Gulf Wars opposed to Iraq (pages 284–297): John R. Ballard
Chapter sixteen worldwide struggle on Terrorism (pages 298–317): corridor Gardner
Chapter 17 The Continental military (pages 319–328): Charles P. Neimeyer
Chapter 18 The Navies and Marines of the yankee Revolution (pages 329–337): Frank C. Mevers
Chapter 19 the U.S. military to 1900 (pages 338–359): Samuel J. Watson
Chapter 20 the USA military due to the fact 1900 (pages 360–377): Ronald L. Spiller
Chapter 21 the U.S. military, 1794–1860: males, Ships, and Governance (pages 378–387): Christopher McKee
Chapter 22 the USA military, 1860–1920 (pages 388–398): Kurt H. Hackemer
Chapter 23 the U.S. army because 1920 (pages 399–410): David F. Winkler
Chapter 24 the united states Marine Corps (pages 411–428): Jon Hoffman
Chapter 25 the U.S. Coast shield and Its Predecessor companies (pages 429–443): C. Douglas Kroll
Chapter 26 the U.S. Air strength (pages 444–453): John W. Huston
Chapter 27 The accomplice military (pages 454–459): Arthur W. Bergeron
Chapter 28 The accomplice military and Marine Corps (pages 460–471): Michael E. Krivdo
Chapter 29 The Citizen Soldier in the US: military, nationwide defend, and Reserves (pages 472–496): James C. Bradford
Chapter 30 safeguard Unification, Joint instructions, and Joint Operations (pages 497–506): Leo P. Hirrel
Chapter 31 Mercenaries, deepest army Contractors, and Non?Traditional Forces (pages 507–516): Jonathan Phillips
Chapter 32 increasing and protecting a Maritime Republic, 1816–95 (pages 523–535): John H. Schroeder
Chapter 33 Interventions in valuable the United States and the Caribbean, 1900–30 (pages 536–553): Anne Cipriano Venzon
Chapter 34 army Interventions in Asia, 1899–1927 (pages 554–563): Stephen okay. Stein
Chapter 35 The career of Germany, Austria, Trieste, Japan, Okinawa, and Korea (pages 564–571): James Jay Carafano
Chapter 36 army Operations in Latin the USA, 1961–2001 (pages 572–583): Lawrence Yates
Chapter 37 army Interventions in need of warfare within the publish 1975 period (pages 584–592): James Meernik
Chapter 38 Alliances and Coalitions in US historical past (pages 593–603): T. Michael Ruddy
Chapter 39 Attaches, MAAGs, and MACs (pages 604–616): Brian Tyrone Crumley
Chapter forty Early American Insurrections (pages 617–639): William Hogeland
Chapter forty-one the army and Reconstruction, 1862–77 (pages 640–649): Margaret M. Storey
Chapter forty two the army, Civil sickness, and typical failures, 1877–2007 (pages 650–661): Charles A. Byler
Chapter forty three Coastal Defenses (pages 662–680): Dale E. Floyd
Chapter forty four Air protection (pages 681–692): Edward B. Westermann
Chapter forty five army Intelligence (pages 693–708): David F. Trask
Chapter forty six army schooling and coaching (pages 709–721): Jennifer L. Speelman
Chapter forty seven US army Chaplains (pages 722–732): John W. Brinsfield, Tierian money and Thomas Malek?Jones
Chapter forty eight army Communications (pages 733–745): Jonathan Reed Winkler
Chapter forty nine army Order and self-discipline (pages 746–761): Benjamin R. Beede
Chapter 50 Covert struggle and distinct Operations Forces (pages 762–773): Bob Seals
Chapter fifty one US struggle making plans: altering personal tastes and the Evolution of functions (pages 774–801): Donald Chisholm
Chapter fifty two army Justice (pages 802–814): Mark Weitz
Chapter fifty three images and the yank army (pages 815–832): Frank J. Wetta
Chapter fifty four track within the army (pages 833–840): Edward H. McKinley
Chapter fifty five the yankee means of struggle (pages 841–855): Antulio J. Echevarria
Chapter fifty six Civil–Military kin (pages 856–868): Dr Charles A. Stevenson
Chapter fifty seven girls within the American army (pages 869–879): D'Ann Campbell
Chapter fifty eight Minorities within the army (pages 880–898): Thomas A. Bruscino
Chapter fifty nine Medals and (pages 899–917): David T. Zabecki
Chapter 60 the army, the Cinema, and tv (pages 918–940): Joseph G. Dawson
Chapter sixty one the army, the inside track Media, and Censorship (pages 941–965): Edward L. Walraven
Chapter sixty two The Military–Industrial complicated (pages 966–989): Benjamin Franklin Cooling
Chapter sixty three the army, warfare, and reminiscence (pages 990–999): G. Kurt Piehler
Chapter sixty four American army Ethics (pages 1000–1017): Thomas B. Grassey
Chapter sixty five the army and activities (pages 1018–1025): Dr Wanda Ellen Wakefield
Chapter sixty six American Veterans' hobbies (pages 1026–1033): William Pencak
Chapter sixty seven take care of the army lifeless (pages 1034–1044): Constance Potter and John Deeben

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Extra resources for A Companion to American Military History, 2 Volumes

Example text

The Old Dominion at War: Society, Politics, and Warfare in Late Colonial Virginia. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. Underhill, John (1638). News from America: Or, A New and Experimentall Discoverie of New England. D. article=1037&context=etas]. Usner, Daniel (1990). Indians, Settlers, and Slaves in a Frontier Exchange Economy: The Lower Mississippi Valley before 1783. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Vincent, Philip (1637). A True Relation of the Late Battell Fought in New England, between the English and Pequet Salvages.

The American Way of War: A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. White, Richard (1991). The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650–1815. New York: Cambridge University Press. , and Thomas F. Schliz (1984). “The Spread of Firearms among the Indians of the Anglo-French Frontier,” American Indian Quarterly, 8:2 (Spring), 103–15. Zelner, Kyle F. (2009). A Rabble in Arms: Massachusetts Towns and Militiamen During King Philip’s War.

Anderson’s book helped explain one of the fundamental issues of colonial military history: why the professionals of the British Army viewed the Yankee provincials as such bad soldiers. On the heels of A People’s Army, we received social histories of other locales in colonial America, to include Connecticut (Selesky 1990) and Virginia (Titus 1991), which showed how forming and maintaining an army produced profound social and cultural strains and changes on the societies from which those armies came.

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