We are traveling this week to the Capital Rare Book Fair in Washington DC. We wee be open again on May 8

Record of Engagements with Hostile Indians Within the Military Division of the Missouri, from 1868 to 1882

$650

Author: Sheridan, Lieutenant General P. H. (1831-1888

Publisher: Government Printing Office

Condition: Near Fine
Jacket Condition: No Dust Jacket As Issued

Graff records an edition prior to this published in Chicago in 1882. Half pebbled leather with matching in color cloth; spine titles in gilt with black lined divisions. Marbled endpages with matching textblock. No Flaws or Blemishes but minimal shelf handling; Still Gift Quality. Text is clean with appropriate age-toning. 8vo; 9 inches tall; 111 pages of text followed by blank pages presumed to give the spine room for the titles. A very handsome rebinding. Compiled from official reports describing over 400 engagements in chronological order, including a lengthy description of the Battle of the Little Big Horn. After the US Civil War Sheridan reported to the Gulf of Mexico, where his presence along the Texas border hastened the fall of Maximilian, the French puppet emperor in Mexico, in 1867. He was later named military commander of Louisiana and Texas (1867), but his harsh administration of Reconstruction measures led to his removal soon thereafter by President Andrew Johnson. He spent the remaining years until 1883 in Western command. He planned and conducted a successful Indian campaign (1868–69), after which he was promoted to lieutenant general. He became general-in-chief of the army in 1883 and five years later was commissioned as general of the army of the United States. He spent his last month’s writing his memoirs. Subjects: North American Indian, American West, Exploration, Indians, Military, United States History, Native American, Indian Wars. United States History Ref: Howes S-395; Graff 3753, Rittenhouse, 520