Journal of Military History
". . . no one has offered more thorough and balanced coverage than has Paul Carlson. . . ."
The Buffalo Soldier Tragedy of 1877 FROM THE PUBLISHER
The year 1877 was a drought year in West Texas. In the middle of that arid summer, a troop of some forty buffalo soldiers (African American cavalry led by white officers) struck out into the Llano Estacado from Double Lakes, south of modern Lubbock, pursuing a band of Kwahada Comanches who had been raiding homesteads and hunting parties. A group of twenty-two buffalo hunters accompanied the soldiers as guides and allies. Several days later three black soldiers rode into Fort Concho at modern San Angelo and reported that the men and officers of Troop A were missing and presumed dead from thirst. The "Staked Plains Horror," as the Galveston Daily News called it, quickly captured national attention. Although most of the soldiers eventually straggled back into camp, four had died, and others eventually faced court-martial for desertion. The buffalo hunters had ridden off on their own to find water, and the surviving soldiers had lived by drinking the blood of their dead horses and their own urine. A routine army scout had turned to disaster of the worst kind. Although the failed expedition was widely reported at the time, the sparse accounts since then have relied exclusively on the white officers' accounts. Paul H. Carlson has mined the courts-martial records for testimony of the enlisted men, memories of a white boy who rode with the Indians, and other sources to provide a nuanced view of the interaction of soldiers, hunters, settlers, and Indians on the Staked Plains before the final settling of the Comanches on their reservation in Indian Territory.
FROM THE CRITICS
Journal of Military History
Although this harrowing tale has been related in previously
published articles and book chapters, no one has offered more
thorough and balanced coverage than has Paul Carlson. . . .
Persons interested in the Southern Plains, Native American
history, frontier military life, and race relations within American
institutions will be pleased with all that this book has to offer.