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Monday, October 20, 2025

Booknotes: Honey Springs, Oklahoma

New Arrival:

Honey Springs, Oklahoma: Historical Archaeology of a Civil War Battlefield by William B. Lees (TAMU Pr, 2025)

The field of conflict archaeology has proven itself highly useful in both affirming and challenging the findings of more traditional document-based history. More than an adjunct, it can also raise important questions of its own. Though the interval between book-length publications has widened, it is good to see that the genre hasn't been completely overtaken by evolving trends.

William Lees's Honey Springs, Oklahoma: Historical Archaeology of a Civil War Battlefield takes us across the Mississippi and into what is today's Oklahoma to offer a fresh perspective on a major battle fought in the region. "Historians have long recognized the Battle of Honey Springs on July 17, 1863, for its unusual makeup of Black, Indian, and White combatants and as the most significant battle of the Civil War in Indian Territory."

More from the description: Lees's study "is the first book to focus solely on this event. It is unique in that its discourse and conclusions flow from the convergence of three lines of evidence: written history (memory), scientific archaeological findings, and military terrain analysis of the landscape." Like most books of this type, Lees's volume is filled with methodological description and analysis along with numerous artifact photos and distribution maps.

More: "One of the synthesizing questions addressed by author William B. Lees is how to explain rebel loss." Honey Springs, Oklahoma "makes clear the location of skirmishing, the lopsided attack of Union troops on the right of the Confederate line, and precise locations of fighting during the rebel retreat. This analysis is the fulcrum in the re-envisioning of the agency of Native American participants."

2 comments:

  1. Drew: As you imply, these studies are extremely important. Battlefield archaeology has confirmed or changed the analysis of what actually happened and how/why at several locations, including the Little Big Horn, Monmouth, and Saratoga.

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