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The Mexican War Correspondence of Richard Smith Elliott (American Exploration and Travel Series, Vol 76)

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Title: The Mexican War Correspondence of Richard Smith Elliott (American Exploration and Travel Series, Vol 76)
by Richard Smith Elliott, Mark L. Gardner, Marc Simmons
ISBN: 0-8061-2951-4
Publisher: Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Txt)
Pub. Date: September, 1997
Format: Hardcover
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $29.95
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Average Customer Rating: 5 (1 review)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: A micro look at the Mexican War in N.M., excellently edited.
Comment: The Mexican War Correspondence of Richard Smith Elliott, edited and annotated by Mark L. Gardner and Marc Simmons, University of Oklahoma Press, 1997, xi + 292 pgs. The book consists of what the title says it does, plus some useful material written later by Elliott but appropriately inserted by the editors. Elliott was an elected Lieutenant in the Laclede Rangers which was a unit from St. Louis and a part of the Missouri Volunteers, in turn a part of Kearny1s Army of the West during the Mexican War. Irregularly, from May 1846 to July of the next year, Elliott sent dispatches back to the St. Louis Daily Reveille, writing as John Brown. In brief, Lt. Elliott with his outfit went from his home to Santa Fe, where with few exceptions, he remained throughout his term of enlistment. Compared to many other soldiers of that time, he led an easy life. (After all, many of us pay to live in Santa Fe, although arguably the amenities may be somewhat better than they were 150 years ago.) However, Elliott's descriptions of the marches, Bent's Fort, Santa Fe and its inhabitants including the native ladies, are most interesting, as are his opinions of some of his associates and high-ranking commanders. The Introduction is helpful and the notes, we think, are the main achievement of the editors: erudite, expansive as need be, and interesting on their own ‹ as you might expect from those two well-known historians. Notes are what turns diaries or dispatches into histories; in this case a valuable piece of New Mexico history and an excellent view of a minuscule part of the Mexican War.

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