One Community’s Complex Experience with Civil War Many Civil War historians today are focusing on guerrilla warfare and detailed community studies as a way to illuminate the dynamics of loyalty and dissent, conflict and violence in the Civil War South. They are recognizing the prevalen...
Although the American Civil War is often thought of as a sectional contest, southerners not only fou...
Just hours before the Army of Northern Virginia raised the white flag at Appomattox Court House, Con...
During the American Civil War, Colonel John S. Mosby launched one of the most successful guerilla ca...
Conflicted Loyalties and Postwar Identities in the Border South This important book explores the Civ...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...
Civil War Guerrillas Most of the history that has been written about the American Civil War conc...
A Community in Constant Conflict The Civil War in Winchester, Virginia In Beleaguered Winchester, ...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
Awful things may be done by neighbor to neighbor in the pressured midst of civil conflict. In the so...
An Impressive Case Study of the Rise and Fall of a Biracial Society in Civil War and Reconstruction ...
A Closer Look at Reconstruction in a Southern State Mark L. Bradley, a historian with the U.S. A...
When traveling west along the North Carolina Piedmont, one sees the Blue Ridge rise abruptly, 3,000 ...
Race Trumps Class Flagging Support Undermines South When Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Nor...
During the American Civil War a separate conflict was fought along the home front. Waged by Confeder...
Civil War and Reconstruction in North Carolina Abraham Lincoln did not appear on the ballot in Nor...
Although the American Civil War is often thought of as a sectional contest, southerners not only fou...
Just hours before the Army of Northern Virginia raised the white flag at Appomattox Court House, Con...
During the American Civil War, Colonel John S. Mosby launched one of the most successful guerilla ca...
Conflicted Loyalties and Postwar Identities in the Border South This important book explores the Civ...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...
Civil War Guerrillas Most of the history that has been written about the American Civil War conc...
A Community in Constant Conflict The Civil War in Winchester, Virginia In Beleaguered Winchester, ...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
Awful things may be done by neighbor to neighbor in the pressured midst of civil conflict. In the so...
An Impressive Case Study of the Rise and Fall of a Biracial Society in Civil War and Reconstruction ...
A Closer Look at Reconstruction in a Southern State Mark L. Bradley, a historian with the U.S. A...
When traveling west along the North Carolina Piedmont, one sees the Blue Ridge rise abruptly, 3,000 ...
Race Trumps Class Flagging Support Undermines South When Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Nor...
During the American Civil War a separate conflict was fought along the home front. Waged by Confeder...
Civil War and Reconstruction in North Carolina Abraham Lincoln did not appear on the ballot in Nor...
Although the American Civil War is often thought of as a sectional contest, southerners not only fou...
Just hours before the Army of Northern Virginia raised the white flag at Appomattox Court House, Con...
During the American Civil War, Colonel John S. Mosby launched one of the most successful guerilla ca...