AMERICAN WEST HISTORY

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The Mexican Frontier, 1821-1846: The American Southwest Under Mexico

David J. Weber


The quarter-century of Mexican sovereignty over the land that is today the American Southwest was a period of turmoil and transition. Between 1821 and 1846, Mexico City's ties to the far northern frontier were steadily weakened by domestic political and social strife as well as by foreign economic encroachment. The gradual loss of social and economic links and the eventual lapse of political allegiance is perceptively reinterpreted from the Mexican perspective by Professor Weber.

The book is essential reading for all who are interested in the history of the West and the Southwest. The late Ray Allen Billington praised the book as "meticulously prepared, sparklingly written, and brilliantly interpreted. Its perspective will affect all writing on western history for a generation to come."



Winner of the 1983 Ray Allen Billington Award from the Organization of American Historians

David J. Weber is The Robert and Nancy Dedman Professor of History and the Director of the Clements Center for Southwest Studies at Southern Methodist University.

Histories of the American Frontier series

6 x 9 440 pages 29 halftones, 9 maps

$ ( paperback )  978-0-8263-0603-6 Low stock, call for availability

 

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