Violence in the Hill Country: The Texas Frontier in the Civil War Era

Violence in the Hill Country: The Texas Frontier in the Civil War Era

by Nicholas Keefauver Roland
Violence in the Hill Country: The Texas Frontier in the Civil War Era

Violence in the Hill Country: The Texas Frontier in the Civil War Era

by Nicholas Keefauver Roland

eBook

$33.99  $44.99 Save 24% Current price is $33.99, Original price is $44.99. You Save 24%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

2022 Ramirez Family Award for Most Significant Scholarly Book, Texas Institute of Letters

An in-depth history of the Civil War in the Texas Hill Country that examines patterns of violence on the Texas frontier to illuminate white Americans’ cultural and political priorities in the nineteenth century.


In the nineteenth century, Texas’s advancing western frontier was the site of one of America’s longest conflicts between white settlers and native peoples. The Texas Hill Country functioned as a kind of borderland within the larger borderland of Texas itself, a vast and fluid area where, during the Civil War, the slaveholding South and the nominally free-labor West collided. As in many borderlands, Nicholas Roland argues, the Hill Country was marked by violence, as one set of peoples, states, and systems eventually displaced others.

In this painstakingly researched book, Roland analyzes patterns of violence in the Texas Hill Country to examine the cultural and political priorities of white settlers and their interaction with the century-defining process of national integration and state-building in the Civil War era. He traces the role of violence in the region from the eve of the Civil War, through secession and the Indian wars, and into Reconstruction. Revealing a bitter history of warfare, criminality, divided communities, political violence, vengeance killings, and economic struggle, Roland positions the Texas Hill Country as emblematic of the Southwest of its time.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477321775
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 01/06/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 274
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Nicholas Keefauver Roland is the US Army JAG Corps Regimental Historian and Archivist, and Professor of Legal History and Leadership at The Judge Advocate General's Legal Center and School in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Chapter One. The Texas Hill Country on the Eve of the Civil War
Chapter Two. The Hill Country in Antebellum Politics and the Secession Crisis
Chapter Three. From Secession to the Nueces River
Chapter Four. Indians, Inflation, and Bushwhackers
Chapter Five. Civil War and Political Violence
Chapter Six. Reconciliation and the Incorporation of the Texas Frontier
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Appendix A. Indian Raiding Deaths during the Civil War
Appendix B. Casualties of Civil War Violence, 1862–1865
Appendix C. Indian Raiding Deaths after the Civil War
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

William D. Carrigan

More than a case study of the Texas Hill Country, this book helps us better understand westward expansion and the ways in which the Civil War increased tension and violence among white settlers on the frontier of the slave South. The analysis is always sound, frequently very insightful, and based on outstanding research in both published and unpublished sources.

Lance R. Blyth

An insightful study of how the violence of insurgency and counterinsurgency shaped the Texas Hill Country's ethnic, social, economic, and political relations during the Civil War era. Accounting for nearly timeless global patterns, Roland's work will be of interest not only to historians but also to security scholars.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews