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"Waterways of Westward Expansion - The Ohio River and its Tributaries" by Archer Butler Hulbert is part of the author's "Historic Highways of America" series which aimed to educate readers about the important road and travel systems in the United States. The Ohio River is the largest river in the country, and its pathway has been vital to America's transportation system. Hulbert's book ensures this importance isn't overlooked.
During the Seven Years' War, Sir John St. Clair served as Deputy Quartermaster General with British General Edward Braddock's disastrous campaign to capture Fort Duquesne at the Forks of the Ohio in 1755. St. Clair had great responsibilities during the campaign and was the first Deputy Quartermaster General in North America's history. History has laid a litany of blame at Braddock's feet: he was old, slow, logistically naive, a martinet poorly versed in tactics, uninterested in his soldiers' welfare and unwilling to cooperate with the colonists. Based on a new transcription of St. Clair's correspondence, this comprehensive study of Braddock's logistics offers a radical reinterpretation of the general and his campaign. The author also presents an examination of St. Clair's role as quartermaster during Brigadier General John Forbes' subsequent and successful campaign against Fort Duquesne in 1758.
"Pilots of the Republic; The Romance of the Pioneer Promoter in the Middle West" by Archer Butler is a book about the history of Americans, detailed with existing facts and story. He further describes the impact of the country, that America has given all men an equal opportunity.
"Paths of the Mound-Building Indians and Great Game Animals" by Archer Butler Hulbert Hulbert earned his fame as a historical geographer, writer, and professor of American history. He believed, through writing this book, that every road has a story and the burden of every story is a need. The greater the need, the better the road and the longer and more important the story. He goes back into American history and explains how the Native Americans were the very first road builders, even at a time without pavement or formal road laying.
Archer Butler Hulbert's 'Boone's Wilderness Road' takes readers on a journey through the most desolate country imaginable, following the longest, blackest, and hardest road of pioneer days in America. Daniel Boone, the frontiersman who broke the road open, is remembered in the road's name, the Wilderness Road, a wilderness of laurel thickets that lay between Kentucky and Cumberland Gap. In this volume, Hulbert explores the first social movement into the lower Ohio Valley, Henderson's Transylvania Company, and the struggle of the Kentucky settlements against the British and their Native American allies, among other aspects of the West's story.