The Conservative Frontier is a landmark study of the social, cultural, economic, and demographic factors that have shaped the political landscape of West Texas, making it the most conservative place in the nation. Deeply researched and compellingly written, Jeff Roche's careful reconstruction of a century of regional history, from 1876 to 1976, introduces us to a remarkable cast of characters, such as Pappy O'Daniel, J. Evetts Haley, and Robert Welch, whose shared commitment to hyperpatriotism, religious fundamentalism, anti-statism, anti-communism, free-market capitalism, and white supremacy provide a direct pathway to and a profound mirror on the national political present.
— David M. Wrobel, Stony Brook University, author of America's West: A History, 1890–1950
I didn’t think I cared about how cattle drives worked in nineteenth-century West Texas. I had no inkling of how that might explain why Amarillo is presently the most right-wing city in the nation. But now I do. What this splendid book demonstrates is how, in the hands of a practitioner of style and erudition, narrative history can bridge centuries, making the connections between Then and Now feel both natural and fresh.
— Rick Perlstein, historian and journalist, author of The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
Jeff Roche convincingly argues that the origins and strength of West Texas’s deeply conservative politics lie in the distinctive history of the region’s settlement in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His evocative portrayal of West Texas shows that this vast but only lightly studied region has been at the center of national developments for more than a century.
— Benjamin Heber Johnson, Loyola University Chicago, author of Texas: An American History
A quietly convincing account of how the 'cowboy conservatism' of West Texas, with its evangelical anti-intellectualism and white nationalist leanings, was refined into the New Right...[This book is as] informative as it is exhaustive.
— The Dallas Morning News
[This book is] an engaging and thorough political chronicle of West Texas...As Roche tells it, the remorseless plains of West Texas contain the headwaters of a mighty current that runs from the John Birch Society to Barry Goldwater and up through Ronald Reagan to the country beyond.
— The New York Times
By reconstructing the West Texas region’s history starting in 1876, Roche helps readers understand the rise of the modern right and the relationships between history, place, and politics.
— The College of Wooster
[This is] a mostly affectionate account of West Texas’s distinct political traditions...Roche is a well-read and discursive storyteller who is drawn to interesting characters..and [the book is] highly readable and engaging. He tells familiar stories well and has a keen eye for the informative but little-known detail.
— Texas Monthly
[An] expansive chronicle of West Texas politics...Roche’s well-informed narrative abounds with fascinating detours, like an exploration of the role West Texas A&M football coach Joe Kerbel played in making the university’s campus more diverse in the 1960s. It makes for a terrific window onto an influential but little regarded corner of the American political landscape.
— Publishers Weekly