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| Book Review | The Western Historical Quarterly, 34.1 | The History Cooperative
34.1  
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Spring, 2003
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Book Review


Nature’s Army: When Soldiers Fought for Yosemite. By Harvey Meyerson. (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2001. xvi + 318 pp. Illustrations, notes, index. $35.00.)

     The "Old Army"—the American military before the twentieth century and before global-reaching power—performed many services for the American republic. Although fighting Indians has dominated the view of that military, the reality is that the work of the Old Army was far more characterized by "nation-building, peacekeeping [as anachronistic as they sound], distinctive earthy patriotism, [and] environmentalism" (p. 23). In fulfilling such roles, the Old Army s hand in establishing Yosemite National Park, as well as the national park system, is the subject of Nature’s Army. 1
    Harvey Meyerson, a senior staff member at the Library of Congress, divides Nature’s Army, a revision of his dissertation, into three sections. In the first section, he discusses how the early Republic s army developed into the only national bureaucracy capable of managing a national park. He then moves to the Old Army s role in establishing Yosemite National Park, guiding his readers through the duties of cavalrymen, whom he credits with saving that park and the national park system for future generations. Lastly, he delves into an intellectual discussion of the Old Army's ethical values, proposing that frontier soldiers were consummate environmentalists. . . .


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