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William Henry Jackson was an explorer, photographer, and artist. He
is also one of those most often overlooked figures of the American
West. His larger claim to fame involves his repeated forays into
the western lands of nineteenth-century America as a photographer.
Jackson's life spanned multiple incarnations of the American West.
In a sense, he played a singular role in revealing the West to
eastern Americans. While others opened the frontier with the axe
and the rifle, Jackson did so with his collection of cameras. He
dispelled the geological myths through a lens no one could deny or
match. His wet plate collodion prints not only helped to reframe
the nation's image of the West, but they also enticed businessmen,
investors, scientists, and even tourists to venture into the
western regions of the United States. Prior to Jackson's widely
circulated photographs, the American West was little understood and
unmapped-mysterious lands that required a camera and a cameraman to
reveal their secrets and, ultimately, provide the first
photographic record of such exotic destinations as Yellowstone,
Mesa Verde, and the Rocky Mountains. Jackson's story was long and
his life full, as he lived to the enviable age of 99. This
biography presents the good, bad, and ugly of Jackson's life, both
personal and professional, through the use primary source
materials, including Jackson's autobiographies, letters, and
government reports on the Hayden Surveys.
Most Americans familiar with General John J. "Black Jack" Pershing
know him as the commander of American Expeditionary Forces in
Europe during the latter days of World War I. But Pershing was in
his late fifties by then. Pershing's military career began in 1886,
with his graduation from West Point and his first assignments in
the American West as a horsebound cavalry officer during the final
days of Apache resistance in the Southwest, where Arizona and New
Mexico still represented a frontier of blue-clad soldiers, Native
Americans, cowboys, rustlers, and miners. But the Southwest was
just the beginning of Pershing's West. He would see assignments
over the years in the Dakotas, during the Ghost Dance uprising and
the battle of Wounded Knee; a posting at Montana's Fort
Assiniboine; and, following his years in Asia, a return to the West
with a posting at the Presidio in San Francisco and a prolonged
assignment on the Mexican-American border in El Paso, which led to
his command of the Punitive Expedition, tasked with riding deep
into Northern Mexico to capture the pistolero Pancho Villa. During
those thirty years from West Point to the Western Front, Pershing
had a colorful and varied military career, including action during
the Spanish-American War and lengthy service in the Philippines.
Both were new versions of the American frontier abroad, even as the
frontier days of the American West were closing. All of Pershing's
experiences in the American West prepared himfor his ultimate
assignment as the top American commander during the Great War. If
the American frontier and, more broadly, the American West provided
a cauldron in which Americans tested themselves during the
nineteenth century, the same is true for John Pershing. His story
is a historical Western.
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