Over at Cosmic America, Keith Harris beat me to the punch on this one. But Jake can attest to the fact that, since the news of the revision of Civil War dead up by 130,000 broke, I have been grumbling on and off
So, my social streams flooded on Monday with an article from the Denver Business Journal, a weekly C...
I have to admit something: when it comes to interpretation, I\u27m making this all up as I go along....
My time as a writer for the Gettysburg Compiler is at an end—as is my time at Gettysburg College its...
750,000 and rising. 2.5 percent of the population. Greater than all other American wars combined. No...
Our profession is a unique and somewhat strange one. We are paid, fundamentally, to give voice to th...
The battle anniversary loomed in the waning days of June. And Gettysburg was preparing. Aside from t...
Last spring, my friends told me that it was the perfect time to get into Civil War reenacting. “The ...
Not only did the armies leave something of a state of chaos behind them after the battle of Gettysbu...
It has been one year since the birth of this blog. Not one year since our first post. If you run bac...
Author Ian Finseth, in The Civil War Dead and American Modernity, has mined the graveyards, remains,...
Earlier this spring, I sat in Gettysburg at the Future of the Civil War conference and listened to...
Perhaps it is because I have spent so much time with people for whom the Civil War is a life choice,...
November 19 is Remembrance Day in Gettysburg, the day that Lincoln dedicated part of the battlefield...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
Nothing was happening in Gettysburg in the spring of 1864. That\u27s not quite true. There was tons ...
So, my social streams flooded on Monday with an article from the Denver Business Journal, a weekly C...
I have to admit something: when it comes to interpretation, I\u27m making this all up as I go along....
My time as a writer for the Gettysburg Compiler is at an end—as is my time at Gettysburg College its...
750,000 and rising. 2.5 percent of the population. Greater than all other American wars combined. No...
Our profession is a unique and somewhat strange one. We are paid, fundamentally, to give voice to th...
The battle anniversary loomed in the waning days of June. And Gettysburg was preparing. Aside from t...
Last spring, my friends told me that it was the perfect time to get into Civil War reenacting. “The ...
Not only did the armies leave something of a state of chaos behind them after the battle of Gettysbu...
It has been one year since the birth of this blog. Not one year since our first post. If you run bac...
Author Ian Finseth, in The Civil War Dead and American Modernity, has mined the graveyards, remains,...
Earlier this spring, I sat in Gettysburg at the Future of the Civil War conference and listened to...
Perhaps it is because I have spent so much time with people for whom the Civil War is a life choice,...
November 19 is Remembrance Day in Gettysburg, the day that Lincoln dedicated part of the battlefield...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
Nothing was happening in Gettysburg in the spring of 1864. That\u27s not quite true. There was tons ...
So, my social streams flooded on Monday with an article from the Denver Business Journal, a weekly C...
I have to admit something: when it comes to interpretation, I\u27m making this all up as I go along....
My time as a writer for the Gettysburg Compiler is at an end—as is my time at Gettysburg College its...