'There never was so fine an American army,' wrote second-lieutenant, John Sedgwick, in describing the troops under Major-General Zachary Taylor in 1846. Another then second-lieutenant, destined to see many more armies; U.S. ...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

'There never was so fine an American army,' wrote second-lieutenant, John Sedgwick, in describing the troops under Major-General Zachary Taylor in 1846. Another then second-lieutenant, destined to see many more armies; U.S. Grant, also thought highly of them: 'The rank and file were probably inferior … to the volunteers that participated in all the later battles of the war; but they were brave men, and then drill and discipline brought out all there was in them.' Philip Katcher writes the story of the regulars and volunteers who fought in the Mexican-American War, detailing the infantry, cavalry, artillery and staff of both the American and Mexican armies.

Similar Products

Santa Anna's Mexican Army 1821-48 (Elite)The Alamo and the War of Texan Independence 1835-36 (Men-At-Arms Series, 173)The Mexican Revolution 1910-20 (Elite)The United States Army : 1812-1815 (Men-At-Arms Series, 345)The Mexican War 1846-1848The Mexican Adventure 1861-67 (Men-at-Arms)So Far From God: The U. S. War With Mexico, 1846–1848The Spanish-American War and Philippine Insurrection: 1898-1902 (Men-at-Arms)Men-at-Arms 398: The Texan Army 1835-46Mexican-American War, 1846-48 (Brassey's History of Uniforms)