Elizabeth D. Leonard is the John J. and Cornelia V. Gibson Professor of History at Colby College and the author of five books, including Lincoln's Avengers: Justice, Revenge, and Reunion after the Civil War and Lincoln's Forgotten Ally: Judge Advocate General Joseph Holt of Kentucky.
"""The richness of [Leonard's] stories shines through, and first-person accounts of hardships suffered on the plains are especially gripping."" Publishers Weekly. ""Brimming with life and in the words of those who struggled, Men of Color to Arms! is an indispensable addition to African-American historical literature. Those unfamiliar with this overlooked and long-neglected story will find illumination in Leonard's highly recommended book.""James A. Percoco, Civil War News. ""One of the most useful books to come out of the United States in recent years... Leonard looses a cannon of detail that embraces both Army life and the tests that they faced to gain equality."" Colin Gardiner, Oxford Times. ""Men of Color to Arms! is not only the most complete study ever written of the important service black soldiers rendered during the Indian wars of the American West, but it also offers in clear and finely crafted prose new insight into the role their service played in the larger context of the struggle of blacks for equal rights in the decades following the Civil War."" Peter Cozzens, author of Shenandoah 1862: Stonewall Jackson's Valley Campaign. ""Once again Elizabeth Leonard demonstrates the versatility and range of her skills as a historian and writer. This penetrating account of the black regular regiments in the U.S. army after the Civil War joins her earlier studies of women during the Civil War and the prosecutors of Lincoln's assassins on a select shelf of important books."" James M. McPherson, author of Battle Cry for Freedom. ""Leonard's study is notable for recovering from the record, often from first-hand accounts, a plethora of names and cameos of black soldiers to give a sense not just of the scale of their participation in doing the nation's work,' but [also] its consequences."" Christine Bold, Times Literary Supplement."