“Sherry Robinson’s excellent biography of James S. Calhoun is an important book on a key figure, providing an insightful and engaging account of his life and career. She shows how his political experiences in Georgia as well as his participation in the Mexican War informed his relations with New Mexico’s Indians, nuevomexicanos, and territorial military commanders.”—David V. Holtby, author of Forty-Seventh Star: New Mexico’s Struggle for Statehood
“Until now, James Silas Calhoun has been the most significant figure—Indian agent and territorial governor—about whom historians know the least in early New Mexico Territory. But Sherry Robinson’s outstanding biography narrates the wide-ranging and distinguished career in the law, banking, business, government, and the military that brought Calhoun to occupied New Mexico in 1849. Although the monumental task of steering Natives and Nuevomexicanos into the American fold ultimately destroyed his health, spirit, and hope, his service to them never erased his humanity, dignity, and conscience.”—Durwood Ball, editor of the New Mexico Historical Review
“Sherry Robinson has a journalist’s eye for a great story, and her biography of James S. Calhoun is just that. Exhaustively researched in his native Georgia, in New Mexico where he served as Indian agent and governor, and in points in between, this long-awaited study is as engagingly written as it is highly informative.”—Rick Hendricks, former New Mexico State Historian and coauthor of The Witches of Abiquiu: The Governor, the Priest, the Genízaro Indians, and the Devil
“Robinson’s biography of James S. Calhoun weaves a fascinating tale that engages national politics of the Whigs and Democrats, the complications of US Indian policy over newly acquired territories, and the cultural themes of gender, class, and the role of the press. She masterfully interconnects his life with the tumultuous early years of New Mexico’s entrance into the United States and the resulting conflicts over statehood versus territorial status, military versus civilian control, and native New Mexicans versus Anglo Americans who claimed sovereignty over their land and lives. This riveting biography of Calhoun’s storied life stretches from his early days in Georgia to his governorship and demise in New Mexico and the plains of Kansas, where he ultimately expired.”—Sandra K. Mathews, coeditor of A History of New Mexico Since Statehood