Charles Marion Russell lived the life he painted. He arrived in Montana at
age 16 in 1880, worked as a cowboy, sheepherder, and wrangler, and immersed
himself in the open-range ranching culture, Native American life, and rugged
landscapes of the northern plains. Self-taught and deeply authentic, Russell
produced over 4,000 works, including:
In Without Knocking by Charles M. Russell (1909). Cowboys on horseback burst through the doors
of a saloon, guns blazing and cards flying, in chaotic celebration or
confrontation. Housed at the Amon Carter Museum.
One of Russell’s most famous
“cowboy” paintings, it captures the rowdy, untamed spirit of frontier towns.
Its dynamic composition and humor made it a cultural icon of Western saloons
and revelry.
Charles Marion Russell lived the life he painted. He arrived in Montana at
age 16 in 1880, worked as a cowboy, sheepherder, and wrangler, and immersed
himself in the open-range ranching culture, Native American life, and rugged
landscapes of the northern plains. Self-taught and deeply authentic, Russell
produced over 4,000 works, including:
The Tenderfootby Charles M. Russell (1900).A well-dressed Eastern newcomer
awkwardly attempts to mount or handle a horse, surrounded by amused cowboys in
a ranch setting.
It humorously contrasts
greenhorns with seasoned cowhands, showcasing Russell’s storytelling wit and
keen observation of frontier social dynamics.
Frederic
Remington (1861–1909) was one of America’s most influential artists,
illustrators, and sculptors. Though he spent relatively little time in the West
himself, his vivid depictions of cowboys, cavalry soldiers, Native Americans,
and frontier life profoundly shaped how generations viewed the American West. Working
primarily as an illustrator for magazines like Harper’s Weekly and Collier’s,
Remington produced thousands of works that blended documentary detail with
romantic drama. His early paintings emphasized action and narrative; later ones
shifted toward impressionistic techniques, nocturnes, and atmospheric light
effects, reflecting his evolution from illustrator to fine artist.
Here
are six of his most famous paintings, in roughly chronological order, with
their significance:
A Dash for the Timber (1889).This oil on canvas shows eight
cowboys galloping desperately toward a line of trees, pursued by Native
American warriors. One rider is wounded and slumping in the saddle amid clouds
of dust and gunfire. Housed in the Amon Carter Museum, it was one of
Remington’s early critical successes.
Its
importance lies in establishing Remington as a master of dynamic Western action
scenes. Inspired by his travels documenting U.S. Army campaigns against
Geronimo, it dramatized frontier conflict and courage, helping popularize the
image of the cowboy as a heroic figure while reflecting the era’s often
simplified (and stereotypical) views of settler–Native relations.
The Military Sacrifice (1890).A cavalry scout is shot and
falls from his horse in a narrow rocky pass as his comrades rush forward. Vivid
colors and precise details highlight the chaos of ambush. Now in the Art
Institute of Chicago.
This
painting underscores Remington’s focus on the U.S. Cavalry’s role in the West.
It illustrates the constant dangers faced by soldiers and became iconic for its
dramatic composition and emotional intensity, reinforcing public fascination
with military exploits on the frontier.
Dismounted:The Fourth Troopers Moving the Led Horses (1890).Cavalry troops dismount to lead horses forward in a tense
advance. The painting captures motion, camaraderie, and the practical realities
of mounted warfare. Located at the Clark Art Institute.
It
exemplifies Remington’s skill at depicting horses and military maneuvers from
multiple viewpoints. Important for humanizing soldiers and showing the gritty
logistics behind heroic tales, it contributed to his reputation for
authenticity drawn from firsthand sketches.
The Old
Stage-Coach of the Plains
(1901).A
dramatic scene of a stagecoach racing across the plains, often with implied
danger or pursuit, rendered with sweeping movement and Western landscape.
It
romanticized transportation and travel in the untamed West, capturing the
isolation and adventure of frontier journeys. Important for its sense of scale
and peril, it reinforced the West as a place of constant drama.
An Arizona
Cowboy (1901).A stern, detailed portrait of
a cowboy on horseback in full regalia—hat, chaps, pistol, and lariat—against a
rugged landscape.
This
embodies the archetypal rugged individualist. Its precision in costume and
posture made it a visual blueprint for the “classic cowboy,” influencing
popular culture’s enduring image of Western manhood.
Fight forthe Water Hole (1903). Three cowboys take
cover in a desert waterhole basin, rifles ready, as distant figures approach
under a vast sky. Horses stand nearby; shadows hint at impending threat. In the
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
A
masterpiece of tension and survival, it popularized the idea of the arid West
as a battlefield for scarce resources. Published in Collier’s, it blends
action with psychological depth and bold composition, reflecting Remington’s
maturing style.
Exemplifying
Remington’s late nocturne series, it emphasizes atmosphere over narrative
detail. Its purchase by the U.S. government highlighted his status as a major
American artist and conveyed the vulnerability of even seasoned frontiersmen.
A Dash for the Timber (1889) by Frederic Remington. Cowboys
race desperately across an open plain, pursued by Native American warriors in a
cloud of dust and gunfire. This large-scale oil captures Remington's signature
dynamic motion, tension, and realism. It epitomizes the perilous, action-packed
myth of the frontier that shaped Hollywood Westerns and remains one of his most
celebrated narrative works.
The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone by Thomas Moran.Dramatic, glowing vistas of the Yellowstone canyon with its waterfall,
colorful cliffs, and steam vents, viewed from a high overlook with tiny figures
for scale. Moran's intense colors and romantic scale (one version hangs in the
U.S. Capitol) helped convince Congress to create Yellowstone as the first
national park. It defines the sublime, untamed beauty of the West.
The Rocky Mountains, Lander's Peak (1863) by
Albert Bierstadt. A panoramic valley scene with a Native encampment, lake,
waterfall, and towering snow-capped peaks under luminous skies. Bierstadt's
monumental, idealized landscapes promoted the West as a land of opportunity and
grandeur, rivaling European masterpieces and influencing public imagination
The Last of the Buffalo (1888) by Albert Bierstadt. Native hunters on horseback pursue a
dwindling herd of bison across a vast plain, with skulls and carcasses in the
foreground. This late-career work laments the near-extinction of the buffalo
and the changing fate of Indigenous peoples, blending Bierstadt's epic scale
with a poignant historical message.
Fight for the Water Hole (1903) by Frederic Remington. Cowboys defend a scarce desert water
source against attackers in harsh, sun-baked light. Remington's nocturnes and
dramatic lighting shine here, highlighting survival struggles in an unforgiving
environment and reinforcing his role as the premier chronicler of frontier
conflict.
Emigrants Crossing the Plains by Albert Bierstadt.Pioneers in covered wagons traverse vast, luminous Western terrain.
Bierstadt romanticized Manifest Destiny and the hardships/joys of westward
migration, making the landscape feel both welcoming and overwhelming.
When the Land Belonged to God by Charles M. Russell.Vast herds of bison and Native hunters in open
country before settlement. Russell's works often contrast pre-contact abundance
with later changes, showcasing his skill with animals, movement, and authentic
Western ecology.
Here are ten Native American
leaders widely regarded as among the most influential, in rough order of broad
recognition and impact:
Sitting Bull (Hunkpapa Lakota, 1831to 1890) A spiritual leader, warrior, and
unifier who rallied Lakota and allied tribes against U.S. encroachment on the
Great Plains. He played a central role in the Great Sioux War and the decisive
victory at the Battle of the Little Bighorn (1876), where his coalition
defeated George Armstrong Custer’s forces. Even after fleeing to Canada and
returning to reservation life, he symbolized resistance until his death during
an arrest tied to the Ghost Dance movement.
Tecumseh (Shawnee, 1768 to 1813) A brilliant orator and strategist who
forged a vast pan-Indian confederacy across the Great Lakes and beyond to halt
American westward expansion. With his brother Tenskwatawa, he established
Prophetstown as a base for cultural and political renewal. He allied with the
British in the War of 1812 and died in battle, but his vision of unified Native
resistance inspired generations.
Geronimo (Chiricahua Apache, 1829 to 1909) A medicine man and guerrilla leader
who became the last major Native American to surrender to U.S. forces (1886).
After Mexican troops killed his family, he led repeated raids and escapes from
reservations across the Southwest, evading thousands of soldiers for years. His
defiance made him an enduring symbol of Apache resistance and Native
resilience.
Crazy Horse (Oglala Lakota,1840 to 1877) A legendary warrior chief renowned
for his tactical genius and refusal to surrender his people’s way of life. He
was instrumental in victories during Red Cloud’s War and led Lakota forces to
triumph at Little Bighorn. He fought to protect the Black Hills (sacred Lakota
land) until his controversial death in U.S. custody.
Chief Joseph (Nez Perce, 1840 to 1904) A diplomatic and military leader who
guided nearly 700 Nez Perce (including women, children, and elders) on a
1,600-mile fighting retreat toward Canada in 1877 to avoid forced removal from
their ancestral homeland. Outmaneuvering U.S. troops, he earned admiration for
his humanity and eloquence, famously declaring upon surrender: “I will fight no
more forever.” He continued advocating for his people’s return until his death.
Red Cloud (Oglala Lakota, 1822 to 1909) The only Native leader to win a major
war against the United States outright (Red Cloud’s War, 1866 to1868). Through
a series of victories—including the Fetterman Massacre—he forced the U.S. to
abandon forts along the Bozeman Trail and sign the Fort Laramie Treaty,
temporarily securing Lakota territory. He later shifted to diplomacy while
still defending his people’s rights.
Cochise (Chiricahua Apache, 1810s to 1874) A fierce raider who, after a false
accusation sparked war in 1861, led his people in a decade-long guerrilla
campaign against U.S. and Mexican forces from mountain strongholds. He
ultimately negotiated a peaceful reservation in Arizona on terms that allowed
his band to retain some autonomy and resources—demonstrating strategic
leadership in both war and peace.
Pontiac (Ottawa, 1720 to 1769) An influential chief who organized a
widespread multi-tribal uprising (Pontiac’s Rebellion, 1763) against British
colonial policies after the French and Indian War. His coalition attacked forts
across the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley, forcing Britain to rethink its frontier
administration and highlighting the power of Native alliances.
Sequoyah (Cherokee, 1775 to 1843) A self-taught scholar who
single-handedly invented the Cherokee syllabary (85 characters) in the early
1800s, enabling his people to achieve near-universal literacy within years.
This cultural innovation preserved Cherokee history, laws, and identity through
the Cherokee Phoenix newspaper and amid the Trail of Tears removal—proving
leadership through intellectual empowerment rather than warfare.
Powhatan (Powhatan Confederacy, 1547
to 1618) Supreme
chief who forged a powerful confederacy of over 30 Algonquian-speaking tribes
in the Chesapeake region through diplomacy, marriage alliances, and force. As
the first major Indigenous leader to interact with English Jamestown settlers,
he initially provided aid but later waged war to protect his territory. His
strategic governance set the stage for early colonial-Native relations.
Harriet Tubman. Born into slavery, Tubman escaped in 1849 and became the most
famous conductor on the Underground Railroad. During the war, she served the
Union as a nurse, scout, and spy in South Carolina. In 1863, she became the
first woman to lead a major military raid—the Combahee River Raid—freeing over
700 enslaved people while disrupting Confederate supply lines. Her bravery
combined abolitionism with direct combat support, making her a symbol of
resistance and freedom.
Sarah Emma Edmonds (Frank Thompson). Edmonds disguised herself as a man named
Frank Thompson and enlisted in the Union Army's 2nd Michigan Infantry. She
served as a soldier, nurse, and spy in battles including Antietam and Bull Run
before illness forced her out. Her story (one of hundreds of documented female
soldiers) proved women's physical and mental resilience in combat.
The American Civil War (1861–1865) shattered traditional gender norms. While
men fought on the battlefields, thousands of women served as nurses, spies,
scouts, soldiers in disguise, and activists—often at great personal risk. Their
efforts saved lives, gathered critical intelligence, challenged slavery, and
advanced women's roles in society. Clara Barton later noted that the war
advanced women's social position by 50 years.
Clara Barton. Known as the "Angel of the Battlefield," Barton left
her job in the U.S. Patent Office to deliver supplies and nurse wounded
soldiers at the front lines of battles like Antietam and Fredericksburg. She
worked independently of official organizations, often under fire, and later founded
the American Red Cross. Her hands-on humanitarian work professionalized
battlefield medicine and relief efforts.
Dorothea Dix. A pre-war reformer for the mentally ill, Dix was appointed
Superintendent of Union Army Nurses in 1861—the first woman to hold such a high
federal post. She recruited and trained thousands of nurses, set strict
standards for care, and improved hospital conditions despite resistance from
male officials. Her leadership elevated nursing as a respectable profession for
women.
Sally Louisa Tompkins. The only woman commissioned as a Captain in the
Confederate Army (by Jefferson Davis himself), Tompkins ran Robertson Hospital
in Richmond. Her facility had the lowest mortality rate of any hospital in the
war due to her strict hygiene and care standards. She treated thousands of
soldiers while defying gender barriers in military medicine.
Mary Edwards Walker.One of the few female surgeons in the Union Army,
Walker served in field hospitals and as a volunteer surgeon. She often wore
men's clothing for practicality and was captured as a spy but released. In
1865, she became the only woman ever awarded the Medal of Honor for her service
(later revoked and restored). Her work challenged medical and gender norms.
Susie King Taylor. A formerly
enslaved Black woman who escaped to Union lines, Taylor became the first Black
Army nurse. She taught literacy to soldiers in the 1st South Carolina
Volunteers (later 33rd U.S. Colored Troops), nursed the wounded, and documented
her experiences in a memoir. Her service highlighted African American women's
crucial, often overlooked roles in the Union effort.
Rose O'Neal Greenhow A prominent Washington, D.C., socialite and
Confederate sympathizer, Greenhow ran a spy ring that gathered intelligence
from Union officials. Her reports helped the Confederacy win the First Battle
of Bull Run. Imprisoned twice, she continued smuggling information even after
exile. Her espionage demonstrated how women could leverage social access for
military advantage.
Belle Boyd Nicknamed the "Siren of the Shenandoah," this
17-year-old Virginian became one of the Confederacy's most famous spies. She
provided key intelligence to Stonewall Jackson during the Shenandoah Valley
Campaign and was arrested multiple times. Her daring operations and charm made
her a celebrity on both sides, highlighting women's covert contributions to the
Southern cause.
Elizabeth Van Lew A wealthy Unionist in Confederate Richmond, Van Lew
operated one of the most effective spy networks of the war. She smuggled
information to Union generals (including Grant), aided prisoner escapes from
Libby Prison, and even planted a spy in Jefferson Davis's household. Her
efforts provided vital intelligence that shortened the war in Virginia.
General William TecumsehShermanstands as one of the most polarizing figures in American military
history. Celebrated for his ruthless “March to the Sea” during the Civil War,
which helped break the Confederacy’s will to fight, Sherman turned his
attention westward after 1865. As commanding general of the U.S. Army from 1869
to 1883, he directed the military campaigns that subdued the Plains Indian
tribes and opened the American West to railroads, settlers, and mining
interests. His application of total-war tactics—destroying an enemy’s resources
and capacity to resist—proved as effective against Native Americans as it had
against the South. By the time he retired, the once-dominant buffalo-hunting
cultures of the Great Plains had been shattered, and thousands of Indigenous
people were confined to reservations.
Born in 1820 in Ohio and
named after the Shawnee leader Tecumseh—an ironic detail given his later
career—Sherman graduated from West Point in 1840. He served in the
Mexican-American War, left the army for civilian life, and rejoined at the
outbreak of the Civil War. His friendship with Ulysses S. Grant propelled him
to prominence. When Grant became president in 1869, Sherman succeeded him as
commanding general, overseeing a vast territory between the Mississippi River
and the Rocky Mountains. With fewer than 25,000 troops scattered across
frontier posts, his primary mission was to protect the transcontinental
railroad and wagon trails while facilitating white settlement.
Initially, Sherman supported
diplomatic efforts. As a member of the Indian Peace Commission, he helped
negotiate the Medicine Lodge Treaty (1867) and the Treaty of Fort Laramie
(1868), which established reservations for southern Plains tribes and the
Sioux. He also arranged the return of Navajo people from the Bosque Redondo
reservation to their homelands in New Mexico. Yet Sherman viewed treaties as
temporary measures. When the Medicine Lodge agreements collapsed in 1868 and
raids continued, he authorized his subordinate, Major General Philip Sheridan,
to launch a winter campaign against the Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Kiowa. The
resulting Battle of the Washita River in November 1868 destroyed a Cheyenne
village and set the tone for future operations. Sherman’s strategy was clear:
strike when tribes were vulnerable, in winter, when food and mobility were
limited.
Sherman’s private
correspondence revealed a harsh worldview. After the 1866 Fetterman Massacre,
in which 81 soldiers died in an ambush by Sioux warriors, he telegraphed Grant
urging “vindictive earnestness against the Sioux, even to their extermination,
men, women and children.” In 1867 he told Grant that the nation would not allow
“a few thieving, ragged Indians” to halt railroad progress. He believed Native
resistance obstructed civilization and that military force, not negotiation
alone, would decide the West’s future. Yet he also criticized corrupt Indian
agents and speculators who exploited reservation tribes.
The cornerstone of Sherman’s
campaign was economic warfare. He recognized that the buffalo—source of food,
clothing, shelter, and spiritual life for Plains Indians—was the foundation of
their independence. Rather than ordering soldiers to slaughter herds directly,
Sherman encouraged civilian hunters. In an 1868 letter to Sheridan, he
suggested inviting “all the sportsmen of England and America” for a “Grand
Buffalo hunt” to sweep the herds away. Professional hunters like William
“Buffalo Bill” Cody and hide merchants responded enthusiastically. By 1873,
vast stretches of the Plains were littered with rotting carcasses. Colonel
Richard Irving Dodge described the scene: where “myriads of buffalo” had roamed
the year before, now only “a dead, solitary, putrid desert” remained. Congress
attempted to protect the herds in 1874, but Sherman helped convince President
Grant to pocket-veto the bill. Within a decade, the buffalo were nearly extinct
in the wild—fewer than 325 remained by the early 20th century. Without their
primary food source, tribes faced starvation or surrender.
Sherman’s oversight extended
to major conflicts of the 1870s. He reorganized frontier forts and supported
operations during the Modoc War in California and Oregon, the Great Sioux War
of 1876 (which included the Battle of the Little Bighorn), and the Nez Perce
War. In 1871, after narrowly escaping the Warren Wagon Train raid by Kiowa and
Comanche warriors in Texas, he insisted that captured chiefs Satanta and Big
Tree be tried for murder in a civilian court—the first such trial of Native
leaders in U.S. history. These campaigns, though often led by subordinates like
George Custer, Ranald Mackenzie, and Nelson Miles, bore Sherman’s strategic
imprint: relentless pursuit, destruction of villages and supplies, and winter
attacks that exploited Native vulnerability.
By the late 1870s, the
free-roaming warrior societies of the Plains had been broken. The once-mighty
Sioux, Cheyenne, Comanche, and Kiowa were confined to reservations where they
depended on government rations. Historian David D. Smits noted that, with their
economic base destroyed, Indigenous people had “no choice but to accept a
servile fate on a reservation.” Sioux leader Sitting Bull later reflected that
“a cold wind blew across the prairie when the last buffalo fell—a death-wind
for my people.” Sherman retired on February 8, 1884, at the mandatory age of
64, having achieved the nation’s goal of securing the West for railroads and
settlement.
Sherman’s legacy in the
Indian Wars remains contentious. To many 19th-century Americans, he was a
pragmatic hero who tamed a “savage” frontier and enabled national expansion. To
Native Americans, his policies amounted to cultural destruction. He never
uttered the infamous line “The only good Indian is a dead Indian”—that phrase
is usually attributed to Sheridan—but his writings and actions reflected a
willingness to use extreme measures when resistance persisted. His middle name,
drawn from a Shawnee chief who once united tribes against American
encroachment, underscored the irony of his career.
In the end, Sherman’s western
campaigns completed the work begun in Georgia: the application of total war to
achieve political ends. The railroads he protected crisscrossed the Plains,
towns sprang up beside them, and the buffalo were gone. The Indian Wars under
his command marked the closing chapter of armed Indigenous resistance on the
continent and the triumph of industrial America over the nomadic cultures that
had thrived there for centuries. Sherman died in 1891, remembered primarily for
the Civil War, yet his quieter, more methodical conquest of the West reshaped
the nation just as profoundly.
Here are twelve of the most notable and frequently discussed Civil
War paintings (primarily from the 1860s–1880s era). They capture
battlefield action, camp life, emancipation, human cost, and symbolic
landscapes rather than just heroic charges.
Guerrilla
Warfare (Picket Duty in Virginia)by Albert Bierstadt(1862).
Bierstadt, known for grand landscapes, depicts Union soldiers ambushing
Confederates in a lush Virginia setting with a fallen soldier and distant
homestead. It highlights the irregular, personal nature of much of the fighting
and contrasts serene scenery with sudden violence.
Prisoners from the Front by Winslow Homer (1866). One of
Homer's masterpieces and often called one of the most telling paintings of the
war. It shows captured Confederate soldiers (a defiant young officer, an older
man, and others) confronting a poised Union general in a devastated landscape.
Painted post-war but based on Homer's frontline observations, it explores
class, defeat, resilience, and reconciliation without glorification.
A Ride for Liberty – The Fugitive Slaves by Eastman Johnson (1862). A
powerful, rare depiction of an enslaved Black family galloping toward Union
lines at dawn, seeking freedom amid the chaos. Johnson witnessed similar
scenes; the painting emphasizes agency and self-liberation rather than passive
waiting for emancipation, with the family looking in different directions
(future, past, present).
Home, Sweet Homeby Winslow Homer (1863). Two Union
soldiers in camp pause reflectively by a fire, evoking profound homesickness
through simple, intimate details. Homer, who served as an illustrator with the
Army of the Potomac, excelled at capturing the quiet emotional toll of war
rather than combat spectacle.
Defiance: Inviting a Shot before
Petersburgby Winslow
Homer (1864). A lone Confederate soldier stands boldly on a parapet, taunting
Union lines, while comrades (including a Black musician with a banjo) rest
below in the trenches. It conveys raw defiance, boredom, and the surreal mix of
danger and routine during the brutal siege of Petersburg.
A
Coming Storm by Sanford Robinson Gifford (1863). A luminist landscape
showing dark clouds gathering over a serene lake and autumnal mountains.
Painted during the war (and once owned by Edwin Booth, brother of Lincoln's
assassin), it metaphorically captures the nation's gathering crisis and
uncertainty, blending beauty with impending doom.
At
the Front by George Cochran Lambdin (1866). A contemplative Union
officer reflects somberly, conveying the psychological weight and trauma of
combat experience. Post-war paintings like this shifted focus from action to
the inner costs of service.
The Girl I Left Behind Me by Eastman Johnson (1872). A young woman stands
on a promontory, gazing uncertainly as distant clouds (possibly battle smoke)
loom. Titled after a popular soldiers' ballad, it poignantly addresses
separation, waiting, and the home front's anxiety.
Skirmish in the Wilderness by Winslow Homer (1864). Homer's depiction of
chaotic close-quarters fighting in dense woods during the 1864 Overland
Campaign. It avoids romantic heroism, emphasizing confusion and the brutal,
tangled reality of battle.
Evening Gun, Fort Sumter by Conrad Wise Chapman (1864). Based
on Chapman's sketches as a Confederate soldier, this shows the battered fort at
twilight after bombardment—the site of the war's first shots. It captures
endurance and the war's origins through atmospheric, documentary-style detail.
Grant and His Generals by Ole Peter Hansen Balling (1865). A
formal group portrait of Union leaders (including Grant and Sherman) on
horseback, symbolizing command, unity, and impending victory as the war wound
down. It contrasts with more intimate works by celebrating leadership and
resolution.
Stalingrad, fought from 1942 to 1943, was one of the
deadliest battles in history and a major turning point on the Eastern Front.
German forces entered the city and fought brutal street-by-street combat, but
Soviet forces counterattacked and encircled the German 6th Army. Hitler refused
to allow a breakout, and the encircled army eventually surrendered.
Its importance was enormous. Stalingrad destroyed a major
German army, shattered the aura of German invincibility, and shifted the
strategic initiative toward the Soviet Union. After Stalingrad, the Red Army
increasingly drove the Axis westward.
The First Battle of the Marne was fought in September 1914,
early in World War I. German armies had advanced rapidly toward Paris, but
French and British forces counterattacked when the German right wing became
overstretched and exposed. The Germans withdrew, and the immediate bid to win
the war quickly failed.
This battle mattered because it stopped the German drive on
Paris and helped turn the war into a long trench stalemate. The “Miracle on the
Marne” became one of the first major signs that the war would not be short or easy.
Waterloo was fought on 18 June 1815 near present-day Belgium
and ended Napoleon’s return from exile. Wellington’s Anglo-allied army held
defensive ground against repeated French attacks until Prussian forces under
Blücher arrived and struck Napoleon’s flank. The French army collapsed, and
Napoleon’s rule was over.
The battle ended the Napoleonic era in Europe. It restored a
balance of power led by the major coalitions against France and became one of
the most consequential military defeats in European history. Waterloo also
fixed Napoleon’s image in history as both a genius commander and a fallen
emperor.
Here is a
widely accepted “top ten” list of famousU.S. naval battles, focusing on
historical impact and public recognition.
One: Battle
of Lake Erie (War of 1812, 1813)
Gave the U.S.
control of Lake Erie against the Royal Navy; Oliver Hazard Perry’s report, “We
have met the enemy and they are ours,” became iconic.
Two: Battle
of Manila Bay (Spanish‑American War, 1898)
Commodore
George Dewey’s Asiatic Squadron destroyed Spain’s Pacific fleet, signaling the
emergence of the U.S. as a major naval power.
Three: Attack
on Pearl Harbor (World War II, 1941)
Japanese
carrier strike that crippled much of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, drew the United
States fully into World War II, and transformed naval warfare around carriers.
Four: Battle
of Coral Sea (World War II, 1942)
First battle
fought entirely by carrier‑launched aircraft with opposing fleets never in
visual range; a strategic U.S.–Allied victory that helped set up Midway.
Decisive U.S.
victory that sank four Japanese carriers, blunting Japan’s offensive capability
in the Pacific and shifting the balance of the war.
Six: Naval
Battles of Guadalcanal (World War II, 1942–1943)
Series of
fierce surface and carrier actions around the Solomon Islands that halted
Japanese expansion and began sustained U.S. offensive operations.
Seven: (World
War II, 1944)
Massive
carrier battle often called the “Great Marianas Turkey Shoot,” which shattered
Japanese naval aviation and secured U.S. control of the central Pacific.
Eight: Battle
of Leyte Gulf (World War II, 1944)
Generally
considered the largest naval battle in history; U.S. and Allied forces
decisively defeated the Japanese fleet during the liberation of the Philippines.
Nine: Battle
of the Atlantic (World War II, 1939–1945, with major U.S. role from 1941)
Long campaign
rather than a single battle, but U.S. Navy and Allied navies’ anti‑submarine
warfare against German U‑boats was vital to keeping Britain supplied.
Saratoga was actually a campaign fought in two major actions
in 1777, Freeman’s Farm and Bemis Heights. British General John Burgoyne
advanced south from Canada but became overextended, short of supplies, and
unable to secure the support he expected. American forces under Horatio Gates,
with key battlefield leadership fromBenedict Arnold, held their ground and
eventually forced Burgoyne’s surrender.
Its importance was diplomatic as much as military. Saratoga convinced
France that the Americans had a real chance to win, helping bring French
support into the Revolutionary War. That alliance changed the war from a
colonial rebellion into a global struggle against Britain.
These battles matter for different reasons, but they share a
common pattern: each one changed the strategic balance far beyond the
battlefield itself. Some became cultural touchstones as much as military
events. Others directly changed the map of power in their eras.
Tours, fought in 732, pitted Frankish forces under Charles
Martel against an Umayyad raiding army in Gaul. Charles chose strong defensive
ground, which reduced the effectiveness of cavalry assaults by the Muslim
force. The Umayyad commander Abd al-Rahman was killed, and the raiding army
withdrew.
Its broader significance is debated, but the victory
certainly strengthened Frankish power and helped check further Umayyad
penetration into western Europe. It also fed the later image of Charles Martel
as the defender of Christian Europe. The battle became more famous in later
memory than it was in immediate medieval politics.
Hastings was fought on 14 October 1066 between William of
Normandy and King Harold II of England. Harold had just forced back another
invasion in the north and then marched rapidly south to face William, leaving
his army tired and perhaps understrength. After hours of fighting, Norman
tactics, including feigned retreats, helped break the English line, and Harold
was killed.
The consequences were transformative. Norman victory
replaced the Anglo-Saxon ruling elite with a new aristocracy, reshaped
landholding patterns, and deeply altered English political culture and
language. Hastings is one of the clearest examples of a battle that changed the
course of a national history.
These battles matter for different reasons, but they share a common pattern: each one changed the strategic balance far beyond the battlefield itself. Some became cultural touchstones as much as military events. Others directly changed the map of power in their eras.
Fought in 490 BC on the plain of Marathon, this battle was
part of the first Persian invasion of Greece. Athens faced a much larger
Persian force sent by Darius I. The Athenians, led in practice by Miltiades,
used disciplined hoplite infantry to attack and defeat the Persians, preventing
a direct move on Athens itself.
Its importance was both military and symbolic. The victory
showed that Persian forces could be beaten in open battle by Greek heavy
infantry, and it gave Athens a powerful sense of civic confidence. It also
became a foundational story for later Greek identity and resistance to empire.
Thermopylae took place in 480 BC during Xerxes’ massive
invasion of Greece. A small Greek force, led by King Leonidas and his Spartans,
held a narrow mountain pass against the Persians, using the terrain to
neutralize Persian numbers. The Greeks resisted for several days before flanked
by the Persians.
Militarily, the battle was a defeat, but strategically it
mattered a great deal. It delayed Xerxes’ advance and gave other Greek states
time to prepare, while the Spartan stand became a lasting emblem of sacrifice,
discipline, and duty. The story of the “300” outlived the battlefield itself
and became one of antiquity’s most enduring symbols of heroic resistance.
Three: Battle of
Gaugamela
Gaugamela was fought in 331 BC between Alexander the Great
and Darius III of Persia. Alexander’s army was smaller, but it was highly
mobile and tightly coordinated, while the Persians tried to use their numerical
advantage on open ground. Alexander maneuvered to stretch the Persian line,
then struck at a vulnerable point with his elite cavalry, causing the Persian
center to collapse and Darius to flee.
The result was decisive. Gaugamela effectively ended Persia
as a major independent imperial power and opened the Near East to Macedonian
rule. It also confirmed Alexander’s reputation as one of history’s great
battlefield commanders.