What Readers Are Saying:
“Certainly no historian today knows more about Fort Davis than Robert Wooster. . . . all previous attempts to chronicle the history of the post pale in comparison to what Wooster has produced. Using a variety of impressive and often obscure primary and secondary sources, the study is thoroughly documented and scholarly impressive. Perhaps most notable is Wooster’s ability to ferret out relevant records at the National Archives and various other historical depositories. The end result is a study that both the academic and lay reader is certain to appreciate.”-Jerry Thompson, Texas A&M International University
"The history of individual forts in the American West has developed an extensive historiography. Robert Wooster adds to that body of historical work with his fine study of Fort Davis, Texas. . . a model for a historical monograph. . . Wooster goes beyond military matters to give readers insightful analysis about the interaction of Hispanics, Anglos, and African Americans." -New Mexico Historical Review
This is the best history written on a Texas fort and will be the benchmark standard by which to judge all the others. . . . Wooster masterfully integrates the local, regional, state and national, military, political, social, cultural, ethnic and economic aspects of the Fort Davis experience and tells an interesting story in the process. Within the context of the current historiography there is a number of pretty good Texas fort histories but with this publication Texas will at last have one truly worthy of national merit. It is more than just a fort history, it is a complicated tale of human interaction, of triumph and failure in an unforgiving environment and it is a model for all scholars of the frontier experience.”-Thomas T. Smith, author, The Old Army in Texas
“A fascinating chapter in U.S. military frontier history.”-Military Heritage
“Frontier Crossroads will enrich its readers with its careful analysis of life on the frontier. This book will appeal to military and social historians, Texas history buffs, and those seeking a record of adventure.”-Texas Illustrated Magazine
“Although Wooster does an altogether admirable job of detailing the numerous patrols that the army launched against its swift striking foes and the dozens of nameless skirmishes that they fought, the principal value of this book lies in its contribution to the social history of the West..” -The Journal of Military History
“This is an excellent book. Wooster’s extensive research is complemented by his gift for using excerpts from primary sources to bring the story to life…Wooster moves past the exceptionalist view of the Anglo-American frontier experience and focuses on the fort’s history as 'a place of encounter, conquest, and community,' including information about various ethnic groups, women, and the communities that developed to support the fort. Historians of Texas, military historians, and the general readers alike will enjoy this book.”-Military History of the West
“Wooster’s scholarship has produced a work that will find a place on every bookshelf devoted to the history of the nineteenth-century American West.”-The Journal of American History
“It should serve as a model of how a good military history should be written…a masterful account of a post which served as a place of ‘encounter, conquest and community…Placing the post, its garrison, and the surrounding population into a larger historical context, he has crafted a work that serves as an example of what good military history ought to be.”-Southwestern Historical Quarterly