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War is part of American history. This book examines how military
technology both molded and reflected interactions between American
military institutions and other American institutions. The growth
of engineering and science has reshaped military technology,
organization, and practice from the Colonial era to the present
day. At the same time, military concerns influenced, and and
sometimes channeled, American engineering and scientific
development American Military Technology chronicles the
interactions of technology and science with America's armed forces
from colonial times to the end of the 20th century. Each period of
the nation's history brought new and influential changes to the
interaction of the military and technology, such as: The Beginning
of the The Military-Technological Revolution, 1840-1865: The
introduction of modern small arms, steam power, and technology,
science, and medicine Militarization and Motorization, 1900-1914:
The naval arms race, torpedoes and submarines, and the Signal Corps
and the Airplane. Science, Technology, and Vietnam, 1965-1971:
McNamara's Pentagon, Technology in Vietnam, Smart Bombs and Guided
Missiles. The book is an excellent springboard for understanding
the complex relationship of science, technology, and war in
American history.
Science in Uniform, Uniforms in Science: Historical Studies of
American Military and Scientific Interactions is a collection of
essays, which owes its existence to the fortuitous conjunction of
two events. The first was a temporary exhibition at the
Smithsonian's National Museum of American History in Washington
that opened in October 2002, entitled "West Point in the Making of
America, 1802-1918." Sponsored by the U.S. Army, it commemorated
the bicentennial of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. Rather
than recount the academy's history, however, this exhibit focused
on the lives and work of a select group of West Point graduates,
some famous, others less well known, in the context of American
national development from the beginning of the 19th century through
the First World War. One of the exhibit's central themes was the
significant part West Pointers played in the creation of American
science and engineering. An extraordinary display of objects, such
as natural history specimens sent by antebellum soldier-explorers
in the West to the newly formed Smithsonian Institution, augmented
the biographical narratives with visual and material historical
evidence. Sixteen months later, in January 2004, the annual meeting
of the American Historical Association came to the same city. The
AHA seemed to offer a perfect venue for the exhibit's final public
program, a symposium on the historic links between America's armed
forces and the development of American science and technology. Not
all those who participated in the symposium were able to prepare
articles for this volume, but this book nonetheless represents an
impressive cross-section of work being done on an important but too
often overlooked aspect of American history.
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