It has been one year since the birth of this blog. Not one year since our first post. If you run back in our roll, the first post was February 1st 2011. Still, this blog was born on this day one year ago, or at least the ethic which leads me to post week in, week out was. I didn\u27t even realize that fact until a few weeks ago. [excerpt
In 1961, Gettysburg played host to a kick-off event for the Civil War Centennial. The town commemora...
I read Richard Williams\u27 Old Virginia Blog, not because I agree with what he has to say but expli...
I was very pleased to be one of the two speakers at Sunday night\u27s inaugural Journey to Remember...
The battle anniversary loomed in the waning days of June. And Gettysburg was preparing. Aside from t...
Newspapers are built by bits and pieces. Type is set all throughout the week, long before the paper ...
On Tuesday, Jake wrote asking who controls the memory of 9/11. The ownership of memory is such an in...
Back at the beginning of the summer, I was asked by the College to write a piece on the history of t...
After a hiatus I\u27ve felt guilty about for days, I\u27m returning to the keyboard to rejoin the bl...
There\u27s been a good deal of digital ink spilled recently over whether the sesquicentennial is ove...
This post is part of a series featuring behind-the-scenes dispatches from our Pohanka Interns workin...
Reading the official Facebook page of one of my favorite history authors yesterday, I saw a pithy no...
This blogging endeavour is dangerous. Blogging, I believe, should be a personal medium, where you we...
The following address, “100 Years After Lincoln\u27s Gettysburg Address” by E. Washington Rhodes, ed...
Nothing was happening in Gettysburg in the spring of 1864. That\u27s not quite true. There was tons ...
Last spring, my friends told me that it was the perfect time to get into Civil War reenacting. “The ...
In 1961, Gettysburg played host to a kick-off event for the Civil War Centennial. The town commemora...
I read Richard Williams\u27 Old Virginia Blog, not because I agree with what he has to say but expli...
I was very pleased to be one of the two speakers at Sunday night\u27s inaugural Journey to Remember...
The battle anniversary loomed in the waning days of June. And Gettysburg was preparing. Aside from t...
Newspapers are built by bits and pieces. Type is set all throughout the week, long before the paper ...
On Tuesday, Jake wrote asking who controls the memory of 9/11. The ownership of memory is such an in...
Back at the beginning of the summer, I was asked by the College to write a piece on the history of t...
After a hiatus I\u27ve felt guilty about for days, I\u27m returning to the keyboard to rejoin the bl...
There\u27s been a good deal of digital ink spilled recently over whether the sesquicentennial is ove...
This post is part of a series featuring behind-the-scenes dispatches from our Pohanka Interns workin...
Reading the official Facebook page of one of my favorite history authors yesterday, I saw a pithy no...
This blogging endeavour is dangerous. Blogging, I believe, should be a personal medium, where you we...
The following address, “100 Years After Lincoln\u27s Gettysburg Address” by E. Washington Rhodes, ed...
Nothing was happening in Gettysburg in the spring of 1864. That\u27s not quite true. There was tons ...
Last spring, my friends told me that it was the perfect time to get into Civil War reenacting. “The ...
In 1961, Gettysburg played host to a kick-off event for the Civil War Centennial. The town commemora...
I read Richard Williams\u27 Old Virginia Blog, not because I agree with what he has to say but expli...
I was very pleased to be one of the two speakers at Sunday night\u27s inaugural Journey to Remember...