Citizens More than Soldiers: The Kentucky Militia and Society in the Early Republic
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press | ISBN: 0803229704 | edition 2007 | PDF | 230 pages | 1,23 mb
Historians typically depict nineteenth-century militiamen as drunken buffoons who stumbled into crooked lines, poked each other with cornstalk weapons, and inevitably shot their commander in the backside with a rusty, antiquated musket. Citizens More than Soldiers demonstrates that, to the contrary, the militia remained an active civil institution in the early nineteenth century, affecting the era’s great social, political, and economic transitions. In fact, given their degree of community involvement, militiamen were more influential in Kentucky’s maturation than any other formal community organization…