First blood Comprehensive study investigates climactic battle By July 1861, Americans impatiently awaited the first momentous battle of a civil war that was only three months old. In the opening passages of A Single Grand Victory, Ethan S. Rafuse, professor of history at ...
Seeking to Answer Why the Army of Northern Virginia Lost On the morning of May 3, 1863, one of t...
Fresh Introspective into the First Days of the War John and Charles Lockwood present a meticulous tr...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...
Shattered Expectations The Battle for Manassas With the publication of this book, David Detzer,...
Complexity and Confusion at the Opening of the Civil War The battle of Manassas (Bull Run) in July 1...
The Overland Campaign as a Shift in Warfare In the spring of 1864, after three years of conflict, th...
Retreat from Gettysburg When the Battle of Gettysburg finally ended on July 3, 1863, more than 50,...
The summer of 1863 was a cruel season for the 4,500 starving, beleaguered citizens of Vicksburg, Mis...
Given the steady market for Civil War battle studies, the lack of a complete treatment of the indivi...
River Sentinels Fall of Confederate strongholds recounted On Sunday, February 16, 1862, jubilant F...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
The fears of invasion voiced by the residents of south-central Pennsylvania prior to the Gettysburg ...
Judging by the total number of troops involved (no more than 4,000), the casualties for both sides (...
Battle\u27s first broad study Confederate loss sealed fate of the campaign and the war in the west ...
The Brutal Reality of War Sinks in at Shiloh Many battles throughout the American Civil War impacted...
Seeking to Answer Why the Army of Northern Virginia Lost On the morning of May 3, 1863, one of t...
Fresh Introspective into the First Days of the War John and Charles Lockwood present a meticulous tr...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...
Shattered Expectations The Battle for Manassas With the publication of this book, David Detzer,...
Complexity and Confusion at the Opening of the Civil War The battle of Manassas (Bull Run) in July 1...
The Overland Campaign as a Shift in Warfare In the spring of 1864, after three years of conflict, th...
Retreat from Gettysburg When the Battle of Gettysburg finally ended on July 3, 1863, more than 50,...
The summer of 1863 was a cruel season for the 4,500 starving, beleaguered citizens of Vicksburg, Mis...
Given the steady market for Civil War battle studies, the lack of a complete treatment of the indivi...
River Sentinels Fall of Confederate strongholds recounted On Sunday, February 16, 1862, jubilant F...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
The fears of invasion voiced by the residents of south-central Pennsylvania prior to the Gettysburg ...
Judging by the total number of troops involved (no more than 4,000), the casualties for both sides (...
Battle\u27s first broad study Confederate loss sealed fate of the campaign and the war in the west ...
The Brutal Reality of War Sinks in at Shiloh Many battles throughout the American Civil War impacted...
Seeking to Answer Why the Army of Northern Virginia Lost On the morning of May 3, 1863, one of t...
Fresh Introspective into the First Days of the War John and Charles Lockwood present a meticulous tr...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...