The Texas Panhandle Frontier (Revised Edition) - Double Mountain Books | Historical Nonfiction, American West History | Perfect for History Buffs & Book Clubs
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DESCRIPTION
"An outstanding contribution to the historiography of the American West and likely will remain for a long time the definitive work on the Texas Panhandle."―Ernest Wallace "As one born in the region, Rathjen is sympathetic to it, but he is also understanding of it; there is little Chamber of Commerce stuff in his story." ―Robert G. Athearn The Texas Panhandle―its eastern edge descending sharply from the plains into the canyons of Palo Duro, Tule, Quitaque, Casa Blanca, and Yellow House―is as rich in history as it is in natural beauty. Long considered a crossroads of ancient civilizations, the twenty-six northernmost Texas counties lie on the southern reaches of the Great Plains, where numerous dry creek beds and the Canadian River have carved the region appropriately named the High Plains. Through these plains and their canyons, ancient peoples trailed game for the hunt. The Panhandle provided choice grazing lands for bison, and as the region became more familiar to ancient tribes, semipermanent camps marked the landscape. Yet when Coronado's conquistadores crossed the High Plains in search of fabled wealth and found sun-baked adobe instead of gold, they declared the region a wasteland. Likewise, the Republic of Texas found little use for their vast plains land―considering settlement of the frontier far too dangerous. Not until the late-nineteenth century, as the U.S. Army waged war on the Comanches, Kiowas, and Cheyennes who lived there, did Panhandle tracts of frontier open to hard-bitten settlers who had to prove themselves as indomitable as they were land hungry. Departing from the premise that the Panhandle frontier "is but a brush stroke on . . . [the] much larger canvas" of previous frontier histories, Rathjen challenges the work of Frederick Jackson Turner and Walter Prescott Webb, and proves that regional is by no means synonymous with provincial.
REVIEWS
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4.5
The Panhandle of Texas has a wealth of history that is not taught in our high schools here. This book is a great addition to History classes but it also provides excellent material for the casual reader. Coronado's expedition of 1541 proceeded right across the Caprock, down the Running Water Draw from Parmer County to Floyd County. The Lost Expedition of Buffalo Soldiers in the Red River War reached its climax in northern Bailey County. The last of the expeditions of buffalo hunters on the southern Plains played out in the 1880s where our local football heroes fight their own battles every autumn Friday night. The rural communities were founded by brave pioneer families who risked everything on homesteads carved out of the XIT and the other big ranches. Panhandle residents have history to be discovered in every corner of their counties and the length of every draw or arroyo -- prehistoric natives, Apache, Kiowa, Comanche, buffalo hunter, cowboy, hard-scrabble farm families. This is the best account of those times and those events I have yet encountered, all in one volume.
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