Tag Archives: texas

Civil War Podcast, Episode 96

SIBLEY’S NEW MEXICO CAMPAIGN (Part the First)

David Emmanuel Twiggs (1790-1862)


In which we set the stage for Sibley’s New Mexico Campaign by discussing Texas’s secession from the Union in February, 1861 and looking at “Baylor’s Buffalo Hunt” (May-July, 1861).

John Robert Baylor (1822-1894)

 

Our book recommendation for this episode is The Civil War in the American West by Alvin M. Josephy, Jr.

“Marvelous, original… that great, adventurous, little-known side of the Civil War is all here for the first time: the clash of North and South set in the immense space of the West and peopled with some of the most vivid characters of that vivid time.” ~ David McCullough



Listen to Episode 96: 
NewMexicoPartFirst

Civil War Podcast, Episode 5

WAR WITH MEXICO (Part the First)

James K. Polk (1795-1849)


In which we relate how tensions rose along the United States’ southern border, and then how hostilities commenced in April 1846.  This is the first of two (or three) episodes we will use to cover America’s war with Mexico.



Our book recommendation for this show is , So Far from God: The U.S. War with Mexico, 1846-1848 by John S.D. Eisenhower.  “This is the story of one of the strangest, hardest fought, least known, and most important wars in American history.  It is also the story of the spirit of an age: Manifest Destiny and the expansion of a young, robust, and restless nation. The tale begins with the Alamo, or, rather, with the United States remembering the Alamo by annexing the Lone Star republic of Texas and then invading Mexico.  When it ends, more than half of Mexico- including the present-day states of California, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Nevada, and parts of Wyoming and Colorado- will belong to the United States.”


Listen to Episode 5: 
https://traffic.megaphone.fm/ARML5524623995.mp3?updated=1694269369