The General Who Lost Every Fight Against Comanches Until 1875
š Get The Grandpa's Survival Handbook here: https://stan.store/wildwestfocus š¤ Tip: check out Frontier Kitchen too. š THE COMPANION COOKBOOK ā FRONTIER KITCHEN I compiled 14 authentic Wild West recipes from primary historical sources ā adapted for your modern kitchen. š Grandpa's Survival Handbook I put together 50+ forgotten survival skills ā the old-school know-how that kept American families alive when times got hard ā into one handbook. Preserving food, staying warm without power, healing at home, and a whole lot more. No gadgets, no fear, just real skills. ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ In the summer of 1874, the United States Army launched the largest coordinated military operation ever mounted against a single Native people on the southern plains. Five columns of cavalry, three of them commanded by veterans of the Civil War, converged on the Llano Estacado from five directions. At the head of the southern column rode a thirty-four-year-old colonel who had spent four years trying to catch the Comanche, and had not caught them. Not once. This is the story of Ranald Slidell Mackenzie, the Battle of Palo Duro Canyon, and the last free Quahadi war chief who came out of the high plains on June 2nd, 1875, to shake his hand. ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ā¬ š HISTORICAL SOURCES AND FURTHER READING Robert G. Carter ā On the Border with Mackenzie; or, Winning West Texas from the Comanches (1935). Carter served under Mackenzie in the 4th Cavalry, won the Medal of Honor at Blanco Canyon, and was present at Palo Duro. His memoir is the closest thing we have to a firsthand record of these campaigns. Ulysses S. Grant ā Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant (1885). Source of Grant's assessment of Mackenzie as "the most promising young officer in the army." Official Reports of Colonel R.S. Mackenzie to the Department of Texas, 1871ā1875. Held in Record Group 393, National Archives and Records Administration, Washington D.C. Report of the Secretary of War for the Year 1874, U.S. Government Printing Office. S.C. Gwynne ā Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches (Scribner, 2010). The most comprehensive modern account of Comanche military history. Charles M. Robinson III ā Bad Hand: A Biography of General Ranald Slidell Mackenzie (State House Press, 1993). Michael D. Pierce ā The Most Promising Young Officer: A Life of Ranald Slidell Mackenzie (University of Oklahoma Press, 1993). Bill Neeley ā The Last Comanche Chief: The Life and Times of Quanah Parker (Wiley, 1995). J'Nell L. Pate ā Arrell M. Gibson and the Native Peoples / T.R. Fehrenbach ā Comanches: The Destruction of a People (Knopf, 1974). Paul H. Carlson & Tom Crum ā Myth, Memory, and Massacre: The Pease River Capture of Cynthia Ann Parker (Texas Tech University Press, 2010). Jean L. Zimmerman, "Colonel Ranald Mackenzie at Fort Sill," Chronicles of Oklahoma, Vol. 44 No. 1 (Spring 1966). Edward S. Wallace, "Border Warrior," American Heritage Magazine, Vol. 9 Issue 4 (June 1958). Handbook of Texas Online, Texas State Historical Association ā entries for Mackenzie, Palo Duro Canyon, Red River War, and Quanah Parker.

The Comanche Who Almost Destroyed Texas

Buffalo Soldiers Laughed At Apache Tracking, Until Victorio Outsmarted Them Across Three States

The Wagon Box Fight ā When 32 Soldiers Held Off Hundreds Of Lakota

When Georgia Howled: Sherman on the March | GPB Documentaries

The Brutality Of Fetterman Fight ā When 81 Soldiers Were Wiped Out In Minutes

What Apache Scouts Said After Meeting General Crook For The First Time

A 50-Year-Old Apache Mystery Vanished Without A Trace ā Until A Norwegian Found Them In 1937

W.O. Taylor Eyewitness Report Reveals The Drunken Truth Of Custer's Last Stand

The Tribe of Hunters Who Destroyed Spanish Empire's Northern Border

The Comanche Trap Every Texas Ranger Feared

The Day America Lost Its Best General ā Custer At Little Bighorn, 1876

How Geronimo Survived The Impossible Hunt ā Sierra Madre (1886)

The Confederate General Who Switched Sides and Won the Civil War

Geronimo's Genius Strategy That Humiliated 5,000 US Soldiers

Shelby Foote on the Civil War (FULL INTERVIEW)

The Bravest Confederate Privateer You've Never Heard Of and Why They Hanged Him

Worse Than Little Bighorn: America's Forgotten Defeat at the Wabash

James Longstreet: Lee's Old War Horse | Full Biography and Documentary

The Entire Battle of Gettysburg| war history for sleep

