On the Border with CrookFrom 1870 until 1886 Captain John O. Bourke served on the staff of General George Crook, who Sherman described as the greatest Indian fighter the army ever had, a man whose prowess was demon-strated "from British America to Mexico, from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean." But On the Border with Crook is far more than a first-hand account of Crook's campaigns during the Plains Indian wars and in the Southwest. Alert, curious, and perceptive, Bourke brings to life the whole frontier scene. In crisp descriptions and telling anecdotes he recreates the events and landscapes through which he moved; he sketches sharp action-pictures not only of Crook and his fellow cavalrymen but also of such great leaders as Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and Geronimo. Perhaps most important, Bourke shows us how General Crook was able to achieve his most remarkable victory?how this man of war won and deserved the trust of the tribes he had subjugated. |
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Contents
Chapter I | 1 |
Chapter IV | 66 |
Chapter V | 80 |
Chapter VI | 96 |
Chapter VII | 108 |
Chapter VIII | 136 |
Chapter IX | 158 |
Chapter X | 176 |
Chapter XVIII | 307 |
Chapter XIX | 323 |
Chapter XX | 344 |
Chapter XXI | 362 |
Chapter XXII | 381 |
Chapter XXIII | 397 |
Chapter XXIV | 412 |
Chapter XXV | 424 |
Chapter XI | 202 |
Chapter XII | 215 |
Chapter XIII | 230 |
Chapter XIV | 241 |
Chapter XV | 256 |
Chapter XVI | 270 |
Chapter XVII | 283 |
Chapter XXVI | 433 |
Chapter XXVII | 452 |
Chapter XXVIII | 465 |
Chapter XXIX | 480 |
Chapter XXX | 486 |