West Point
A Bicentennial History
Theodore J. Crackel
New in paperback: October 2003
xiv, 370 pages, 36 photographs, 6 x 9
Modern War Studies
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1294-9, $16.95 (t)
Also available in cloth:
ISBN 978-0-7006-1160-7, $34.95
Grant. Pershing. Eisenhower. Schwartzkopf.
The United States Military Academy has shaped America's senior
military leaders from the sons--and now daughters--of farmers
and shopkeepers, laborers and bankers. Now celebrating its two
hundredth anniversary, West Point and its legacy continue to
support and reflect the nation it serves.
Authored by Theodore Crackel, one of the nation's premier
authorities on the academy, West Point: A Bicentennial History
celebrates one of America's most prominent establishments. A
revision and refinement of the author's earlier Illustrated
History of West Point, published more than ten years ago,
it provides the most accurate and comprehensive history yet available
on the academy. It features new research and new perspectives
in every chapter, adds a decade of coverage, and has garnered
the West Point Bicentennial Committee's official seal of approval.
Crackel tells how the institution was created to embody the
vision of Thomas Jefferson and expands our knowledge of the additional
contributions of the Adams administration to its founding. He
reveals how the academy developed to meet the needs of American
expansion by integrating civil engineering into its early curriculum,
then tells how cadets experienced growing sectional tensions
as the nation headed toward civil war. Along the way, he explains
how the familiar physical presence of West Point evolved, offering
new insights on decisions to adopt its classic Tudor-gothic architecture.
In its chronological account of West Point's history, the
book traces a number of themes: cadet and faculty life, institutional
governance, curriculum development, physical expansion, growing
diversity among the cadet corps, and the tensions between the
school's superintendents and its academic board, who often had
competing visions for the academy and its future. In following
the lives of cadets and officers, Crackel also offers a fresh
look at the treatment of black cadets in the nineteenth century
and a new analysis of their experience in the twentieth, as well
as a look at the place of women in the corps since the graduation
of the first female in 1980.
To understand West Point is to better understand the country
its graduates are sworn to protect and defend. This bicentennial
history honors that institution as no other book does and shows
how it has endowed the select of America's youth with dedication
to its motto: duty, honor, country.
A classic work on the United States Military Academy and
its history. . . . By far the best of many books on the institutional
and social history of West Point.--Parameters
This excellent study tells of the triumphs and tragedies
of the institution and its faculty and cadets. Recommended for
all collections and all levels.--Choice
"West Point is fortunate to have a historian of Ted Crackel's
intellect and talent. His fine history will long be recognized
as the standard work on the subject."--Robert A. Doughty,
coauthor of Warfare in the Western World and chair of the
U.S. Military Academy history department
"A skillful blend of institutional and social history,
Crackel's is the best of the many books about West Point."--Edward
M. Coffman, author of The War to End All Wars
"Crackel tells the compelling stories of an institution
that has grown up with America."--Ed Ruggero, author
of Duty First: West Point and the Making of American Leaders
THEODORE J. CRACKEL is the Visiting Professor of History
at West Point during its bicentennial year (20012002) and
is Director and Editor of Papers of the War Department, 17841800,
at East Stroudsburg University in Pennsylvania. He is also the
author of Mr. Jefferson's Army: Political and Social Reform
of the Military Establishment, 18011809.
|