Winner, 2026 Kate Broocks Bates Award for Historical ResearchTexas during the Civil War is often viewed through the lenses of military tactics and the state's role in the Confederacy. Saltgrass Prairie Saga covers those subjects thoroughly, but what sets it apart is its additional attention to other aspects of those watershed years in Texas.What was life like for families when their men were ordered away to risk their lives, and women were left to ensure stability for their hard-earned homes and farms? How did families and soldiers cope with the pressures of survival and remain connected despite separation?Saltgrass Prairie Saga answers those questions through the lives of a family who came to Texas from a small German village in 1845. They became pioneers on the vast coastal prairie east of Houston, and by 1861 had become well-established as rural Texans-only to find themselves caught up in the Civil War.The world they experienced is contextualized through family letters and diaries, military reports, period books and newspaper articles, and local and state records. The author ensures the voices of women are preserved, and the book is complete with maps, illustrations, and photographs.Blending life and settlement on the frontier, the early years of Texas cattle ranching, German immigration during the period, and the impact of the Civil War on the state, Saltgrass Prairie Saga offers a fresh view of a pivotal period in Texas history.