In the popular imagination, the image of Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant amicably discussing surrender terms in William McLean\u27s parlor on April 9, 1865, symbolizes the end of the Civil War. The subsequent proceedings at Bennett Place, North Carolina, have often been an obscure footnote to the st...
Confederate army had long odds Could Hood\u27s gamble have paid off? Nashville: The Western Confe...
Analyzing Grant\u27s Command Structure Ulysses S. Grant ranks as the greatest general to emerge ...
Seeking to Answer Why the Army of Northern Virginia Lost On the morning of May 3, 1863, one of t...
Between Surrender and Peace When did the Civil War end? The answer mythologized in American memory—a...
On April 9, 1865, Palm Sunday, Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant met in the front parlor of Wilmer ...
A New Look at an Important Surrender In the writing of Civil War history the Eastern Theater has lon...
“It hastened what we all fought for, the end of the war: General Sherman’s campaigns through Atlanta...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...
Hood Starts a Downward Spiral Civil War scholars have long recognized William T. Sherman’s 1864 Atla...
At the tiny crossroads town of Cold Harbor, Ulysses S. Grant hoped to crush Robert E. Lee\u27s army ...
The War’s Final Months in Vivid and Entertaining Detail For four long years the Union and the Confed...
At the Intersection of Military Policy and Politics The purpose of David Alan Johnson’s book, Decide...
At the tiny crossroads town of Cold Harbor, Ulysses S. Grant hoped to crush Robert E. Lee\u27s army ...
The remains of a lone apple tree, cut down and carved into small pieces by Confederate soldiers, lay...
Preservation efforts Reconciling North and South The mention of Shiloh conjures up a muster roll o...
Confederate army had long odds Could Hood\u27s gamble have paid off? Nashville: The Western Confe...
Analyzing Grant\u27s Command Structure Ulysses S. Grant ranks as the greatest general to emerge ...
Seeking to Answer Why the Army of Northern Virginia Lost On the morning of May 3, 1863, one of t...
Between Surrender and Peace When did the Civil War end? The answer mythologized in American memory—a...
On April 9, 1865, Palm Sunday, Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant met in the front parlor of Wilmer ...
A New Look at an Important Surrender In the writing of Civil War history the Eastern Theater has lon...
“It hastened what we all fought for, the end of the war: General Sherman’s campaigns through Atlanta...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...
Hood Starts a Downward Spiral Civil War scholars have long recognized William T. Sherman’s 1864 Atla...
At the tiny crossroads town of Cold Harbor, Ulysses S. Grant hoped to crush Robert E. Lee\u27s army ...
The War’s Final Months in Vivid and Entertaining Detail For four long years the Union and the Confed...
At the Intersection of Military Policy and Politics The purpose of David Alan Johnson’s book, Decide...
At the tiny crossroads town of Cold Harbor, Ulysses S. Grant hoped to crush Robert E. Lee\u27s army ...
The remains of a lone apple tree, cut down and carved into small pieces by Confederate soldiers, lay...
Preservation efforts Reconciling North and South The mention of Shiloh conjures up a muster roll o...
Confederate army had long odds Could Hood\u27s gamble have paid off? Nashville: The Western Confe...
Analyzing Grant\u27s Command Structure Ulysses S. Grant ranks as the greatest general to emerge ...
Seeking to Answer Why the Army of Northern Virginia Lost On the morning of May 3, 1863, one of t...