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Southwestern Studies
Series · 62
books · 1716-2006

Books in series

#13

The Theatre in Early El Paso, 1881-1905

1966

#28

Los Chicanos

An Awakening People

1970

#32

The Southwestern International Livestock Show and Rodeo

1972

#33

The Chinese in El Paso

1972

C. L. Sonnichsen book cover
#34

C. L. Sonnichsen

Grassroots Historian

1972

99 pp., author writings, references, photographs. A fine, unread, unmarked copy. An excellent narrative dedicated to the author /historian C.L. Sonnichsen.
Juh book cover
#39

Juh

An Incredible Indian

1993

During his mature life, Juh, a redoubtable Apache and a man with a talent for war, was closely associated with and overshadowed by Geronimo. But Juh was a chief and Geronimo only a war leader; Juh took precedence over his warrior comrade and Geronimo deferred to Juh. That is how history should rank these two redoubtable Apache leaders, but until recently the record has been reversed. Juh's extraordinary record displayed leadership qualities, imagination in battle, awareness of strategy, a grasp of tactics and a singular ability to employ and discipline his followers as effectively as the well-trained soldiers they warred against. In the great operations in which Juh participated, his direction was always markedly his own and could not be mistaken for another's. In the Cushing fight of 1871, in making possible Victorio's exodus from New Mexico in 1880, and in the stunning 1882 release of hundreds of Apaches from Arizona's San Carlos Reservation and leading them through the military-guarded wilderness to their secure retreat in the Sierra Madres of Mexico - in all these actions and others, Juh's genius prevailed. Dan Thrapp, the Southwest's greatest Apache historian, sets the record straight in Juh, the first (and only) full account of this remarkable Apache's shadowy life and career. Originally published by Texas Western Press in 1973, this new edition of An Incredible Indian contains a new introductory essay by Thrapp and an updated text.
Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon and the White Primary book cover
#42

Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon and the White Primary

1993

"I know you can't let me vote, but I've got to try." With this simple statement in an El Paso polling place on July 26, 1924, Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon quietly began opening the doors to disenfranchised black citizens of the United States. Dr. Nixon, a physician and respected El Pasoan, had voted regularly over a period of years. Since the black community of El Paso represented a three percent minority in the city, the black vote constituted no political threat. But when the time came to test a 1923 Texas law which took voting privileges away from blacks, Dr. Nixon was willing to file the historical lawsuit. He came to El Paso in 1910, the same year he had joined the fledging NAACP. Fourteen years later he and his attorney, Fred Knollenberg, cooperated with the NAACP in taking the case of Nixon vs. Herndon to the U. S. Supreme Court. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote the opinion in a unanimous ruling in favor of Nixon. Twenty years were to pass before Dr. Nixon's pathmarking legal challenge would completely open the door to the black franchise but the gentle El Paso physician, who died in 1966, would live to see most of the work accomplished. Originally published by Texas Western Press in 1974, author Conrey Bryson has written a new Introduction to the revised edition of this important work.
#43

Tadeo Ortiz, Mexican Colonizer and Reformer

1974

According to the author during his brief lifetime (1788-1833) Tadeo Ortiz de Anaya worked for two principal objectives – the independence of his native Mexico from Spanish rule, and its economic development so that it might realize its potential of becoming, in his opinion, the greatest nation in the world. He was a man of ideas and action; and if a number of his projects failed, it was because his excessive zeal and enthusiasm frequently blinded him to realities and warped his judgment. His activities were considerable – after he became a revolutionary, he visited the United States and toured the South American capitals seeking aid for the Mexican independence movement; he wrote an essay on Mexican geography and resources to familiarize his people with Mexico’s potential. He said he was born in the town of Mascota in the Intendacy of Guadalajara now the state of Jalisco on October 18, 1788 this book is about the background of this Mexican patriot, revolutionary, colonizer, and writer, who to a considerable degree was both part and product of the extraordinary times he lived in. Professor, Wilbert H. Timmons, Missouri born and Texas reared. Received his B.A. from Park College, his M.A. from the University of Chicago, and his doctorate in Latin American History from the University of Texas in 1949 and taught courses in that field at the University of Texas at El Paso.
Across the Rio to Freedom book cover
#44

Across the Rio to Freedom

U.S. Negroes in Mexico

1975

#46

Surveying the Texas and Pacific Land Grant West of the Pecos River

1975

#47

Luther T. Ellsworth

U.S. Consul on the border during the Mexican revolution

1975

Book by Kerig, Dorothy P.
#48

United States Customs and the Madero Revolution

1976

#53

Backdoor at Bagdad

the Civil War on the Rio Grande

1977

#58

Mexican Exiles in the Borderlands 1910-13

1979

Book by Henderson, Peter V. N.
#60

Big Bend National Park, the formative years

1980

Book by Jameson, John R
#62

Struggle for Sobriety

Protestants and Prohibition in Texas 1919-1935

1980

#63

Rails at the Pass of the North

1981

History of the railroads—the ATSF, the Southern Pacific, the Texas and Pacific, and the Denver & Rio Grande—which allowed El Paso, the "City of the Pass," to grow and flourish. Illustrated throughout with black and white photos and maps. With extensive bibliography. 64 pages.
#64

Circuit Riders of the Big Bend

1981

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#65

Border Trials

Ricardo Flores Magon and the Mexican Liberals

1981

Book by Langham, Thomas C.
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#66

Impact of Intimacy

Mexican-Anglo Intermarriage in New Mexico, 1821-1846

1982

Craver, Rebecca McDowell
Santa Fe and Taos, 1898-1942 book cover
#67

Santa Fe and Taos, 1898-1942

An American Cultural Center

1982

Reeve, Kay Aiken
#69

Zona Libre, 1858-1905

A Problem in American Diplomacy

1982

Book by Samuel E. Bell, James Smallwood
#70

Women on the Texas Frontier

A Cross-Cultural Perspective

1983

#71

Stagecoach Pioneers of the Southwest

1983

Mullin, Robert N.
#72

Epidemic in the Southwest, 1918-1919

1984

#73

Politics of Southwestern Water

1985

#74

San Patricio Soldiers

Mexico's Foreign Legion

1985

#75

Val Verde Winery

Its Role in Texas Vita Culture and Ecology

1985

Author, Robert C. Overfelt and Publisher, texas western press
#76

Groundwater Policy in the Southwest

1985

Smith, Zachary A.
Arms, Indians, and the Mismanagement of New Mexico book cover
#77

Arms, Indians, and the Mismanagement of New Mexico

1986

English, Spanish
Mexican Texans in the Union Army book cover
#78

Mexican Texans in the Union Army

1986

Book by Thompson, Jerry D.
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#79

Apache Women Warriors

1716

Apache Women Warriors challenges the popular literature and film stereotypes of the passive Native American woman. Apache women were able to assume a variety of roles which gave them more prestige and freedom than most of their eighteenth and nineteenth century female counterparts. These women were the primary providers for their families, could attain and use supernatural power, and participate in raids and wars. Kimberly Moore Buchanan's research draws heavily on the oral history work of the late Eve Ball. A major portion of this study centers on the warrior, Lozen, said to have been the unmarried sister of the famous Warm Springs Apache chief Victorio. She allegedly possessed amazing supernatural powers and was an excellent equestrienne and fighter. Only in the past fifteen years has Lozen emerged as a figure of interest in Native American history. Women warriors were a relatively small, but by no means miniscule faction among Native Americans. Their accomplishments call for a revision of the erroneous popular belief that characterizes Native American women as passive characters in American history.
#80

Traveling West

19th Century Women on the Overland Routes

1987

A rich history of pioneer women traveling on the Overland Routes. Wonderful for your library as well as for an American Early West history student.
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#81

Nana's Raid

Apache Warfare in Southern New Mexico, 1881

1987

Nana's Apache Warfare in Southern New Mexico, 1881 Southwestern Studies by Stephen Lekson.
#82

An Oklahoma Tragedy

The Shooting of the Mexican Students, 1931

1987

Book by Hoffman, Abraham
#83

Lipan Apaches in Texas

1987

This book is in pristine condition inside and out. No dust jacket.
#85

Territorial History of Socorro, New Mexico

1988

Second printing 1989. Stamp on lower spine. ISBN sticker on rear cover. Binding is very well preserved, though with slight shelfwear on some edges and corners and slight sun tanning. Pages are clean and crisp, and printing is tight, clean and bright throughout. MB
#86

The Hispanic Elite of the Southwest

1989

#87

Standoff at the Border

A Failure of Microdiplomacy

1989

Book by Price, Thomas J.
#88

Buffalo Hump and the Penateka Comanches

1989

#89

Fort Union and the Santa Fe Trail

1989

Troops stationed at this outpost in the heart of the Plains Indian territory protected freight wagons and mail coaches on the Santa Fe Trail from 1858 to 1878. Today Fort Larned National Historic Site, Kansas, is one of the best-restored examples of a frontier military settlement. Contains rare historical photos and illustrations, plus new photos by Fred Hirschmann, J. C. Leacock, Steve Mulligan, and others.
#90

We Just Toughed It Out

Women in the Llano Estacado

1990

"The Llano Estacado is truly a land apart. Rising above the surrounding rolling hills, it is a land of immense flatness, as level as a tabletop....."
#91

Mythical Pueblo Rights Doctrine

Water Administration in Hispanic New Mexico

1990

Water administration in hispanic new mexico
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#92

Cynthia Ann Parker

The Life and the Legend

1990

Although Cynthia Ann Parker never recounted her experiences as a captive of the Comanches (1836-60), her story is probably the most familiar of all the pioneer women captured by Indians in the Southwest. Margaret Hacker's five years of research have produced a balanced and dependable account of this tragic story.
#93

Claiming Their Land

Women Homesteaders in Texas

1991

Book by Gould, Florence C., Pando, Patricia N.
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#94

The Great Western

Legendary Lady of the Southwest

1991

Book by Sandwich, Brian
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#95

Revolution on the Rio Grande

Mexican Raids and Army Pursuits, 1916-1919

1992

Contents: Reaction to Revolution: The U.S. Army on the Border in the Upper Big Bend The Brite Ranch Raid Massacre at Porvenir The Neville Ranch Raid and the Burning of Pilares Sotol, Ransom, and the Last American Punitive Expedition into Mexico.
Merejildo Grijalva book cover
#96

Merejildo Grijalva

Apache Captive : Army Scout

1992

Book by Sweeney, Edwin R.
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#97

Desert Tiger

Captain Paddy Graydon and the Civil War in the Far Southwest

1992

Book by Thompson, Jerry D.
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#98

Nellie Cashman

Prospector and Trailblazer

1993

While the 19th century's rules of ladylike demeanor were as straitlaced as whalebone corsets. Nellie Cashman didn't depart her beloved Ireland and adopt America as her homeland to be shackled by Victorian convention. Incurably stricken with gold fever, Cashman became a prospector and thrived on adventure. She saved Grand Central Mining Company magnate E.B. Gage from an Old West-style “necktie party," prevented five men convicted in the Bisbee Massacre from the degradation of a circus-style execution, was the first white woman to trek British Columbia's rugged Cassiar Mountain region and -a half-century later- was the first woman to fly there in an airplane. When not searching tor the Mother Lode, she established and profitably managed businesses in Tucson Tombstone. and Dawson. in the Yukon Territory, foster-mothered five nieces and nephews and contributed time and money to numerous charities. novelist Jeanne Williams said of this book. "This is a lively. well dune and long overdue tribute to one oi the West's must fascinating women."
Juan Cortina and the Texas-Mexico Frontier 1859-1877 book cover
#99

Juan Cortina and the Texas-Mexico Frontier 1859-1877

1998

Texas folklorist J. Frank Dobie, in Vaquero of the Brush Country, called Juan Nepomuceno Cortina "the most striking, the most powerful, the most insolent, and the most daring as well as the most elusive Mexican bandit, not even excepting Pancho Villa, that ever wet his horses in the muddy water of the Rio Bravo." Juan Cortina and the Texas Mexico Frontier, 1859-1877 is the story of an illiterate Brownsville ranchero who rose to become a rugged and fearless frontier "caudillo" and governor of Tamaulipas. Jerry Thompson has compiled the first schorlarly work on Cortina in 40 years. Using nine of Cortina's pronunciamentos," Thompson sees his subject as more than a "social bandit," someone who simply reacted to the evils of a racist society that suppressed the Mexican-Texans socially, economically and politically. Thompson says, "He shot the Brownsville marshal, ambushed Texas Rangers, captured the U.S. mail, defeated the Matamoros militia, battled the U.S. army, harassed the Confederate Army, ambushed French Imperialists, attacked Mexican liberals, and fought anyone who dared get in his way." He shows Cortina to have been among the most important political and military figures on the border during much of the 19th century, a folk-hero to many Tejanos and Mexicanos, a man whose disputed legacy remains an integral part of the history of both Texas and Mexico.
#100

The Court-Martial of Lieutenant Henry Flipper

1994

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#101

Boer Settlers in the Southwest

1995

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#102

The March to Monterrey

The Diary of Lieutenant Rankin Dilworth, U.S. Army : A Narrative of Troop Movements and Observations on Daily Life With General Zachary Taylor's Army

1996

This diary documents the sights and sounds of the beginning of the Mexican War, as observed by young Rankin Dilworth, an officer recently graduated from the United States Military Academy. Dilworth's first entry of April 28, 1846, is from the garrison at Jefferson Barracks; his last entry of September 19, 1846, is from Monterrey, Mexico. As a member of Zachary Taylor's Army, Dilworth led his company of the 1st Infantry in an attack on the fortresses scattered along the eastern side of the city. Dilworth documented his transit down the Mississippi River to New Orleans, his travel by Gulf steamer to Brazos Santiago, and the long, hot trek overland to Monterrey. In the attack of September 23, 1846, on the eastern side of Monterrey, Dilworth was mortally wounded by a cannonball, but lingered on in agony just long enough to learn the American forces had captured Monterrey. He died on September 27, 1846. The diary contains his observations of the Mexican cities of Matamoros, Reynosa, Camargo, and Cerralvo, and how they appeared in 1846.
Zach Lamar Cobb book cover
#103

Zach Lamar Cobb

El Paso Collector of Customs and Intelligence During the Mexican Revolution 1913-1918

1998

Zach Lamar Cobb served as the El Paso Collector of Customs from 1913 to 1918—and as an intelligence agent for the United States Department of State during the Mexican Revolution. This history of his activities captures U.S. intelligence work in the transition from an amateur to a professional operation.
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#104

Ma Kiley

The Life of a Railroad Telegrapher

1998

This is the story of Ma Kiley, a Texas-born railroad telegraph operator who worked as a "boomer" in the American West, Mexico, and Canada in the early 1900s. Although autobiographical writings by women telegraph operators are rare, Ma Kiley left a richly detailed and moving personal account of her life and work in "The Bug and I," first published by Railroad Magazine in 1950. This book also includes an introduction which provides background on telegraphy, a little known area of women's work. It attempts to fill in the "missing history" of women in telegraphy - how women gained access to the field of telegraphy, how they were viewed by their male co-workers, and how women operators struggled to establish their own identities.
The Making of a Mexican American Mayor book cover
#105

The Making of a Mexican American Mayor

Raymond L. Telles of El Paso

1999

Raymond Telles was the first Mexican American mayor of El Paso, Texas, and the most significant Mexican American of his time. This book details his political career from 1948, when he won a hotly contested election for county clerk, to his ambassadorship to Costa Rica.
James Wiley Magoffin book cover
#106

James Wiley Magoffin

Don Santiago-El Paso Pioneer

1999

Autographed copy - El Paso, Texas History.
Red, White, and Green book cover
#107

Red, White, and Green

The Maturing of Mexicanidad, 1940-1946

1999

Avilacamachismo was an attempt on the part of the Mexican state to create a mass media-based cultural nationalism rooted in loyalty to Mexican personalities who embodied the experience of their history in the artifacts of their creativity. Miller (director, Center for Higher Education Ministry at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary) describes the era of avilacamachismo in 1940s Mexico, and looks at the dynamic relationship of culture and state that existed during this often overlooked and misunderstood period. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Imagining Texas book cover
#109

Imagining Texas

Pre-Revolutionary Texas Newspapers 1829-1836

2002

Texas—big, rugged, independent, rebellious—few states evoke such immediate reactions with the mere mention of their names. Texas—gun-toting, maverick-spirited, patriotic. But why did those images become part of the legend that surrounds Texas and how did the word spread? Between 1821 and 1836, Texas belonged to the state of Coahuila and Texas, Mexico; fought for independence from Mexico; established itself as an independent country; and became the twenty-eighth state of the United States of America. In the middle of this turbulent period, Godwin Brown Cotton established the first permanent press in Texas in 1829. The Texas Gazette was a largely promotional press used to communicate Stephen F. Austin's reports of the status of Texas to the Mexican government, to recruit new settlers, and to provide news and entertainment to the people of Texas. Nine days after the first shot of the Texas Revolution was fired in October 1835, the "unsinkable" Telegraph and Texas Register went to print. Established with the intention to promote the "accumulation of wealth and consequent aggrandizement of the country," the paper quickly became the news source for the events of the revolution. Contained in these early newspapers are the images that continue to define our perception of Texas. Author Carol Lea Clark delves into how the settlers—fragmented, independent, competitive—and the publishers of the papers "wrote Texas" into existence. Read the original "tall tales," accounts of life on the "highly favored . . . earth, where the God of nature has scattered choicest blessings," as well as news of the surrender of the Spanish army in Mexico and the seeds of the revolution through the introduction of Mexican troops into Texas. This is the birth of mythic Texas.
#110

The Fighting Padre of Zapata

Father Edward Bastien and the Falcon Dam Project

2003

Book by
#111

José Cisneros

immigrant artist

2006

hardcover, brand new! still in shrink wrap. \Buyer is responsible for any additional duties, taxes, or fees required by recipient's country\ - If you are reading this, this item is actually (physically) in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers.

Authors

Robert M. Utley
Robert M. Utley
Author · 24 books
A specialist in Native American history and the history of the American West, Robert Marshall Utley was a former chief historian of the National Park Service. He earned a Bachelor of Science in history from Purdue University in 1951, and an Master of Arts in history from Indiana University in 1952. Utley served as Regional Historian of the Southwest Region of the NPS in Santa Fe from 1957 to 1964, and as Chief Historian in Washington, D.C. from 1964 until his retirement in 1980.
Suzann Ledbetter
Author · 17 books

Fifteen or twenty minutes of intense Website surfing suggests that biographical segments are usually devoted to former vocations, titles published and awards won. The latter two categories seem redundant to additional electronic buttonry labeled Book List, to homepages advertising current tomes, and mentions elsewhere of honors bestowed, humbly received and treasured in perpetuity. As for the former, having not been gainfully employed in return for weekly paychecks since 1976, I assume a brief, intervening stint as a water-filled shoe insole salesperson doesn't rank right up there with the legions of doctors-, lawyers-, educators-, captains of industry-, or CIA operatives-turned-scribes. Second to vocational pursuits are avocations, which for others range from gardening, needle-arts, molecular biology and NASCAR fanatacism to scuba-diving, astronomy, world travel, and running for miles absent a pack of rabid wolves snapping at one's heels. The fiction writer in me yearns to invent hobbies of that ilk, as one would attribute to a novel's protagonist to make him or her interesting. The nonfiction side advises the truth, or an interpretation of it based on available research. My inner humorist struggles to keep a straight face. Henry David Thoreau disparaged the unexamined life as unworthy of sustained respiration. Valid or not, I'll give it a whirl . . .. When I'm not writing or speaking about writing, I'm either reading, or asleep. I adore my husband and most of the time, our children. Our basic 3bd./2 ba. home is shared with two greyhounds, two fat, hirsute cats and thousands of books—the majority shelved and probably having a scoliotic effect on the floor joists and foundation. At work or during recess, I drink too much coffee, alternating with room-temperature Cokes slugged straight from the bottles. Caffeine, for me, is its own food group and when focused on what I'm writing, suffices for the chewable variety I'm too distracted or lazy to prepare. Habitual meal-skipping isn't recommended, but in theory, should be a literal lean cuisine. Alas, it is not. Finishing a book, fiction or non-, induces a compulsion to rearrange the furniture. Or move. Why, I'll leave to mental health professionals. I suspect it seems easier to Dumpster the crap accumulated over the longish haul and transport items dear to my heart somewhere new and unsullied, than to clean what months of neglect hath wrought. All in all, I suppose sedate is a nice term for this life as lived and breathed. From an exterior perspective, boring might be more appropos. An observer couldn't comprehend any better than I can explain what it is to ply a keyboard and metamorphose into whomever I want—real or imagined—residing wherever I so desire, in whatever era I choose. For richer, for poorer, for better, worse and downright tragic, until deadlines do us part. If life and a livelihood get any better than that, I'm not aware of it. Nor, upon fleet examination, would I trade a minute of mine for someone else's better paid, cooler, infinitely more exciting and nutritious one. In many respects, being a writer is a job, like any other. Except it isn't what I do. It's who I am.

Carol Lea Clark
Author · 1 books

University of Texas at El Paso, Associate Professor of English EDUCATION Ph.D. in English—Rhetoric and Composition Studies, Texas Christian University, 1993. M.A. in English Composition, California State University at San Bernardino, 1991. M.Ed. in Counseling Psychology, University of Houston, 1974. B.A. in English and Psychology, Rice University, 1972. Fulbright Lecturing Award in Jordan, September 2008 to June 2009

Dan L. Thrapp
Author · 3 books
Also wrote Western fiction under the name X.X.["Double-Cross"] Jones.
David J. Weber
Author · 2 books
David J. Weber was founding director of the Clements Center for Southwest Studies at Southern Methodist University. His research focused on the history of the Southwestern U.S. and its transition from Spanish and Mexican control to becoming part of the United States.
Zachary A. Smith
Author · 2 books
Zachary Alden Smith, Ph.D., (b.1953) is a Regent's Professor at Northern Arizona University (Flagstaff, AZ). He lectures on public administration and policy, environmental policy and law, and American politics.
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