Wrangling Pelicans

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESSISBN: 9781477332801

Military Life in Texas Presidios

Price:
Sale price$104.00


By Tim Seiter
Imprint: UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
450 g
Pages:
288

Description

Tim Seiter is an assistant professor of history at the University of Texas at Tyler.

List of Maps and Figures Introduction Chapter 1. Perspiring Walls and Incessant Insects: Environment and Education Chapter 2. Strangling La BahIa: Supply Lines and Smuggling Chapter 3. The Work Seldom Ceases: Duties and Defense Chapter 4. A Poultice of Lion Fat Fomentations: Manpower and Medicine Chapter 5. A Most Dangerous and Desirable Profession: Desertion and Death Chapter 6. La BahIa Vice: Cockfighting and Card Playing Chapter 7. How Best to Retrieve Stolen Horses: Diplomacy and Disobedience Chapter 8. Suffocating under Animal Skins: Insubordination and Incarceration Chapter 9. SeNora TreviNo: Courtship and Conjugality Epilogue Acknowledgments Notes Index

Easily the most engaging study of Presidio La Bahia (today's Goliad), Wrangling Pelicans is a tour de force that blends archival research and historical literature to tell the most complete story possible about common soldiers and their families navigating life on the Spanish Texas frontier.--Jesus "Frank" de la Teja, Professor Emeritus, Texas State University, author of A Revolution Remembered: The Memoirs and Selected Correspondence of Juan N. Seguin In its detailed overview of eighteenth-century Texan presidio life, Wrangling Pelicans personalizes the everyday experiences of the soldiers who served in these isolated frontier military garrisons. This book is distinguished both by its impressive scholarly achievement and its effective narrative approach, using one soldier as a prism through which to examine the social and cultural world of La Bahia. It will stand the test of time as an enduring contribution to our historical understanding of Spanish Texas and the Southwest. There is nothing else like it.--Light T. Cummins, Austin College, author of To the Vast and Beautiful Land: Anglo Migration into Spanish Louisiana and Texas, 1760s-1820s

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