cover image Follow Me to Hell: McNelly’s Texas Rangers and the Rise of Frontier Justice

Follow Me to Hell: McNelly’s Texas Rangers and the Rise of Frontier Justice

Tom Clavin. St. Martin’s, $29.99 (384p) ISBN 978-1-250-21455-3

Bestseller Clavin (coauthor, The Last Hill) sketches in this scrupulous if meandering history the origin story of the Texas Rangers. Beginning in 1821, when Anglo settlers “thought it a good idea to have a sort of militia always ready for future provocations” by local Indigenous tribes, Clavin recounts land skirmishes, cattle raids, Civil War battles, and more. The book’s focal point is Leander McNelly, a member of the infamous Sibley Brigade during the Civil War, who famously tricked 400 Union soldiers into surrendering to his unit of 40 Confederates. McNelly’s “daring courage and consummate skill” in the Battle of Galveston and other Civil War clashes led to his appointment in 1874 as captain of a Texas Ranger unit in Washington County, Tex. Tasked with ridding the Nueces Strip between the Rio Grande and Nueces rivers of bandits and cattle rustlers, McNelly was renowned for his bravery, cunning, and independent streak; he risked international conflict by leading raids into Mexico, but also helped evolve the Rangers “into the modern police force of today.” Though there’s plenty of action, McNelly’s fascinating character often gets lost in historical minutiae and filler. This saga sags a little too often. (Apr.)