"This is a good overview of forts and trading posts on the Great Plains. Especially enlightening is the discussion of Indigenous defense works, a subject that has not received the treatment of other posts discussed."—Randy Kane, Nebraska History
"Jay Buckley and Jeffery Nokes have provided an insightful guide to exploring the rich history of the Great Plains through its numerous forts. . . . Rather than simply focusing on military posts, it examines fortifications erected by Indigenous peoples and those built for trade. With summaries of forts across various regions, it is a useful resource for understanding the diverse stories embedded in these fortifications."—Montana The Magazine of Western History
"There is no better introduction to this very important topic. If you need a reference text on Great Plains forts for your bookshelf, make it this one."—David C. Beyreis, Roundup Magazine
"Great Plains Forts is an essential reference for any serious historian studying the forts build west of the Missouri River. . . . Whether focused on forts of American Fur Trade, U.S. Army, Indigenous tribes, or turning the pages of time back to the Spanish, French or British, the authors did a great job of grappling with a complex inventory of forts built by diverse cultures throughout the American West and Canada."—Casey J. Osback, Annals of Wyoming
“The Great Plains are a deep reservoir of American stories. Jay Buckley and Jeffery Nokes have given us a guide to pursuing some of the most revealing ones as told through the dozens of fortifications that have freckled the midcontinental landscape for centuries, from those of Indigenous peoples through others built for commerce and conquest.”—Elliott West, author of Continental Reckoning: The American West in the Age of Expansion
“If looking for a brief summary of forts and posts of the plains and prairie regions, this is your book. Jay Buckley and Jeffery Nokes skillfully weave a narrative history from First Nations fortifications in precontact times to Spanish, Mexican, French, English, and American complexes in both Canada and areas that became part of the United States. An appendix, province by province and state by state, gives summaries of the chronology and purpose of each establishment. No other volume accomplishes so much!”—William R. Swagerty, former director of the John Muir Center at the University of the Pacific