by Jack C. Lane
Lincoln, Nb.: University of Nebraska Press, Bison Books, 2009. Pp. xvii, 328.
Illus., maps, notes, biblio., index. $19.95 paper. ISBN: 0803226586
Originally published in 1978, Armed Progressive: General Leonard Wood was immediately recognized as the standard biography of this most unusual officer, a tribute to the extensive research, excellent analysis, and fine writing displayed by Prof. Lane (emeritus, Rollins College)..
Armed Progressive
covers Wood's early life, education as a physician, career as an army surgeon, and his service in the waning days of the Plains Indian Wars, during which he earned a Medal of Honor. It then discusses his transfer to the line, while continuing to practice medicine, his service with the "Rough Riders," and later as a brigade commander under fire in
Cuba
, where he carried his medical kit while directing the action. After a stint as military governor of a province, and later of
all
Cuba
, he commanded in the
Philippines
, suppressing the last of the Moro uprisings, and served as chief-of-staff of the Army, 1910-1914. His tour in that post was acrimonious, as he struggled to help turn it into a real executive position, rather than a paper one, which led to conflicts with various influential department heads and their political allies. During World War I, Wood helped found the Preparedness Movement, and hoped to command a volunteer division to be raised by his "Rough Rider" buddy Theodore Roosevelt, but spent the war training troops. After the war he served as Governor of the
Philippines
, and made an unsuccessful attempt secure a nomination for president.
In a thoughtful and timely new preface, Prof. Lane, who also wrote the useful America's Military Past: A Guide to Information Sources, comments on what he would change if he were to undertake a complete revision of the work, noting that Wood's role in Cuba and the Philippines certainly merits more attention, a timely reminder that the Army has been in the "nation building" for a very long time..
An important work for anyone interested in the U.S. Army from the Indian Wars through World War I