| In 1847 General Winfield Scott
boldly led a small but undaunted army from the Mexican coast
all the way to the Halls of Montezuma, routing Mexican forces
at every turn while pacifying the countryside. Scott’s
military campaign — America’s first ever in a
foreign country — helped pave the way for victory in
the wider war against Mexico and also posed new challenges
for discipline, logistics, and the treatment of civilians.
Yet it has remained largely neglected by historians.
In this first book-length study of Scott’s brilliant
six-month campaign, Timothy Johnson shows how Scott overcame
such obstacles as inadequate supplies, intense officer rivalries,
and lack of support from President Polk — not to mention
a country full of potentially hostile Mexicans — to
keep his army intact deep in enemy territory and win the war.
He interweaves a compelling narrative of the campaign —
including detailed battle replays, terrain descriptions, and
eyewitness accounts — with a comprehensive analysis
of strategy, operations, and tactics. Along the way, he also
provides considerable insight into Scott’s efforts to
fight a “limited war” by combining military force
with diplomatic negotiation and by implementing a pacification
plan that now seems far ahead of its time.
Scott developed a sophisticated strategy of moderation to
end the war by employing a sword-and-olive-branch approach.
Although his army repeatedly won battles against superior
numbers as it drove ever deeper into Mexico’s interior,
Scott paused after each contest to give the enemy an opportunity
to sue for peace. And by respecting civilian property and
purchasing supplies from the populace, his troops limited
local support for guerrillas that threatened communication
lines. Meanwhile on the battlefield, Scott successfully executed
surprise flank attacks at Cerro Gordo and Padierna, tactical
masterpieces that inspired a generation of Civil War generals
— like Grant, Lee, McClellan, and countless others.
Providing the definitive work on the Mexico City campaign,
A Gallant Little Army highlights the visionary command
of a legendary general, the flinty toughness of the troops
he led, and the emergence of the United States as a potential
global military power.
“Johnson’s excellent history brings this much-neglected
military campaign out of the shadows and gives it the attention
it deserves.”
— Robert W. Johannsen, author of To the Halls
of the Montezumas: The Mexican War in the American Imagination
“The most detailed analysis to date of Winfield
Scott’s spectacular 1847 campaign to capture Mexico
City. . . . Destined to become a classic.”
— R. Bruce Winders, author of Mr. Polk’s
Army: The American Military Experience in the Mexican War
“A fine narrative history and persuasive evaluation
of Scott’s campaign.”
— Joseph G. Dawson III, author of Doniphan’s
Epic March: The 1st Missouri Volunteers in the Mexican War
Timothy D. Johnson is a professor of history
at Lipscomb University in Nashville and author of Winfield
Scott: The Quest for Military Glory. |