The United States Army and the Making of America: From Confederation to Empire, 1775–1903 is the story of how the American military—and more particularly the regular army—has played a vital role in the late eighteenth- and nineteenth-century United States that extended beyond the battlefield. Repeatedly, Americans used the army not only to secure their expanding empire and fight their enemies, but to shape their nation and their vision of who they were, often in ways not directly associated with shooting wars or combat. That the regular army served as nation builders is ironic, given the officer corps’ obsession with a warrior ethic and the deep-seated disdain for a standing army that includes Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence, the writings of Henry David Thoreau, and debates regarding congressional appropriations. Whether the issue concerned Indian policy, the appropriate division of power between state and federal authorities, technology, transportation, communications, or business innovations, the public demanded that the military remain small even as it expected those forces to promote civilian development.
Robert Wooster’s exhaustive research in manuscript collections, government documents, and newspapers builds upon previous scholarship to provide a coherent and comprehensive history of the U.S. Army from its inception during the American Revolution to the Philippine-American War. Wooster integrates its institutional history with larger trends in American history during that period, with a special focus on state-building and civil-military relations.
The United States Army and the Making of America will be the definitive book on the army’s relationship with the nation from its founding to the dawn of the twentieth century and will be a valuable resource for a generation of undergraduates, graduate students, and virtually any scholar with an interest in the U.S. Army, American frontiers and borderlands, the American West, or eighteenth- and nineteenth-century nation-building.
Innehållsförteckning
List of Illustrations
Series Editor’s Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. A Standing Army, the Rose of National Government, and the Constitution
2. The Army and Muscular Nationalism: Nation-building and the Federalists
3. The Army and the Rise of the Jeffersonians
4. President Madison’s Army
5. The Army and the New Nationalism
6. Mr. Jackson’s Army
7. An Uncertain Future
8. Manifest Destiny and the Regular Army
9. New Challenges for the Old Army
10. Army Regulars and the Crisis of Union
11. An Elusive Peace
12. Continued Challenges South and West
13. The Army of the Gilded Age
Epilogue: Old Army, New Empire
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Om författaren
Robert Wooster is Regents Professor of History, Texas A&M University‒Corpus Christi and author of numerous books, most notably The Military and United States Indian Policy, 1865–1903 and The American Military Frontiers: The United States Army in the West, 1783–1900.