Death in the Desert: The Fifty Year's War for the Great Southwest

Death in the Desert: The Fifty Year's War for the Great Southwest

by Paul I. Wellman Jr. (Author)

Synopsis

The Apache Indians and the white settlers came face to face after the Mexican War, when the migrations across the continent reached the Southwest. In depicting the long, bitter resistance of the Apaches, Death in the Desert reveals incidents that provoked their undying hatred of whites. This rousing narrative history by Paul I. Wellman begins in 1837 with the rise to tribal leadership of Mangas Coloradas and ends in 1886 with the surrender of Geronimo. For a half century the dust never settles as U.S. troops fight the Apaches in Arizona and New Mexico and defeat the single uprisings of the Navajos and Pueblos. Two chapters describe the Modoc War in northern California from 1871 to 1873.

$30.17

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 318
Edition: Revised ed.
Publisher: Bison Books
Published: 01 Jan 1987

ISBN 10: 080329722X
ISBN 13: 9780803297227

Media Reviews
This is a book to recommend. For once a thoroughly popular, ordinary man's history of an Indian war has been written justly, giving Indians and white men alike their due. - Oliver LaFarge, New Republic Mr. Wellman makes a colorful, dramatic narrative of it. No one will be bored by his book. - New York Times The book is vivid and accurate, and proves once again that the colour of his skin is a thing of which no white man need be proud. - Times Literary Supplement