Preface and Acknowledgments
1. National Military Expansion on the Western Frontier: Contexts, Comparisons, and Outcomes
2. Subordination and Discretion: The Dilemmas of Expansion, Peacekeeping, and Civil-Military Relations on the Northwestern Frontier
3. Federal Authority under Attack: The Army, Southern States, and Citizens during the Adams Administration
4. The Army and Jacksonians Tangle on the Southern Frontier: Indian Removal and Civil-Military Relations, 1831-1834
5. The Army and Cherokee Removal: Coercive Diplomacy, Peacekeeping, and Preventing Mass Atrocity amid Civil-Military Tension, 1836-1838
6. “This Thankless . . . Unholy War”: The Crisis of Military Reactions to Removal in the Second Seminole War
7. “The Duty of a Soldier to Obey”: Disenchantment, Dissent, and the Crucible of Professional Accountability in the Second Seminole War
8. Changing Attitudes toward Foreign Relations: The Dilemmas of Discipline and International Order along the Canadian Border, 1815-1838
9. Maintaining National Sovereignty and Keeping International Peace: Operations to Suppress American Filibusters against Canada, 1838-1841
10. The Dilemmas of Sovereignty and Expansion: Peacekeeping and Law Enforcement along the Texas Border, 1821-1838
11. Cautious Interventions and Power Projection: Southern Plains Diplomacy, Dragoon Expeditions, and the Initial Move into Texas
12. Manifest Destiny Meets Military Professionalism: The Army Faces Britain and Mexico, 1844-1846
Conclusion. Army, State, and Profession in Nineteenth-Century American History
Appendices
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index