It is interesting to read accounts of life from a different century. To read of a unique time and place in American history is very interesting. The “taming” of the “west“ in the immediate wake of the Civil War Is instructive in many ways. Life of the soldiers and their families in Texas and Kansas in the late 1860s was different from modern renditions of the later west.
With brief mention of Wild Bill Hickok and Buffalo Bill the only familiar characters are Generals Custer and Sherman. Yet the description of life at the forts illustrates the dangers faced in the westward migration and the impact of the army and railroad in opening up the way for pioneers.
The volume of information new to me was surprising, the interesting quality of the narrative, replete with anecdotes and descriptive explanations, was a relief, and the subject matter compelling.
While the account ended less than 10 years shy of Custer’s demise (at age 36!) at Little Big Horn one can easily imagine how easily it could have happened earlier.
There were many epiphanies for me in reading this book, and had it achieved in the Texas portion the interest that I found in reading the Kansas portion i might have given it five stars.
An important, monumental, and good read.