Though its most famous battles were waged in the East at Antietam,
Gettysburg, and throughout Virginia, the Civil War was clearly a
conflict that raged across a continent. From cotton-rich Texas and
the fields of Kansas through Indian Territory and into the high
desert of New Mexico, the trans-Mississippi theater was site of
major clashes from the war's earliest days through the surrenders
of Confederate generals Edmund Kirby Smith and Stand Waite in June
1865. In this comprehensive military history of the war west of the
Mississippi River, Thomas W. Cutrer shows that the theater's
distance from events in the East does not diminish its importance
to the unfolding of the larger struggle.
Theater of a Separate War details the battles between North
and South in these far-flung regions, assessing the complex
political and military strategies on both sides. While providing
the definitive history of the rise and fall of the South's armies
in the far West, Cutrer shows, even if the region's influence on
the Confederacy's cause waned, its role persisted well beyond the
fall of Richmond and Lee's surrender to Grant. In this masterful
study, Cutrer offers a fresh perspective on an often overlooked
aspect of Civil War history.