Unearthing a Hidden Identity Dan Crofts must have had a wonderful time researching and writing this book. How could it not be fun to solve what Jacques Barzun and Henry Graf called “the ‘most gigantic’ problem of uncertain authorship in American historical writing (1)? First, so...
Few have ever mastered the English language like Abraham Lincoln. From his days as a young, backwood...
Recovering an Overlooked Emancipator David McCullough, Joseph J. Ellis, and Doris Kearns Goodwin hav...
Through a long lens Historical distance aids objectivity In the preface to his biography of the Am...
This the text of a plenary lecture given in 2014 after being named co-winner of the Robert and Vinet...
The words of the Gettysburg Address and Second Inaugural steadied a nation consumed by civil war and...
Examines a review by the antebellum Southern novelist William Gilmore Simms of a new book by the Eng...
The article is a brief examination of certain issues affecting the allocation of authorship in early...
A Survey of Secession Dave Bowman is well known within the guild of academic historians. He demonstr...
My time as a writer for the Gettysburg Compiler is at an end—as is my time at Gettysburg College its...
A research group from the University of Notre Dame, comprising Michael Zuckert, Derek Webb, and Robe...
Bridging the Gap Between Popular and Professional History James West Davidson’s A Little History of ...
Interview with William W. Freehling Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CW...
Before Woodrow Wilson became President of the United States he was a prolific writer of political sc...
This study examines the relationship between writing and American identity in four works--William Br...
Trying to Make Sense of a Misunderstood Figure Written without fear or research, books about Abraham...
Few have ever mastered the English language like Abraham Lincoln. From his days as a young, backwood...
Recovering an Overlooked Emancipator David McCullough, Joseph J. Ellis, and Doris Kearns Goodwin hav...
Through a long lens Historical distance aids objectivity In the preface to his biography of the Am...
This the text of a plenary lecture given in 2014 after being named co-winner of the Robert and Vinet...
The words of the Gettysburg Address and Second Inaugural steadied a nation consumed by civil war and...
Examines a review by the antebellum Southern novelist William Gilmore Simms of a new book by the Eng...
The article is a brief examination of certain issues affecting the allocation of authorship in early...
A Survey of Secession Dave Bowman is well known within the guild of academic historians. He demonstr...
My time as a writer for the Gettysburg Compiler is at an end—as is my time at Gettysburg College its...
A research group from the University of Notre Dame, comprising Michael Zuckert, Derek Webb, and Robe...
Bridging the Gap Between Popular and Professional History James West Davidson’s A Little History of ...
Interview with William W. Freehling Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CW...
Before Woodrow Wilson became President of the United States he was a prolific writer of political sc...
This study examines the relationship between writing and American identity in four works--William Br...
Trying to Make Sense of a Misunderstood Figure Written without fear or research, books about Abraham...
Few have ever mastered the English language like Abraham Lincoln. From his days as a young, backwood...
Recovering an Overlooked Emancipator David McCullough, Joseph J. Ellis, and Doris Kearns Goodwin hav...
Through a long lens Historical distance aids objectivity In the preface to his biography of the Am...