Many volunteers from the British Isles, whatever their motives, took sides in the American Civil War. One of these was Henry Morton Stanley, who became famous largely as a result of his later adventures in Africa, and the books he wrote about the Dark Continent. He chronicled his wartime experiences...
Military Memoir A newly annotated edition of Ambrose\u27s account With all due respect to the writ...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Robert Emmett Rodes strode across Douglas Southall Freeman\u27s Lee\u27s Lieutenants as if he step...
Fact and Fiction? Two Accounts of the Civil War Experience Boy Soldier of the Confederacy: The Mem...
This summer marks Civil War Book Review\u27s second anniversary, which I might allow to pass unmenti...
A prosperous Louisiana planter like George Otis Hall normally would have spent the month of February...
Bryan Grimes was a successful planter in Pitt County, North Carolina, when the Civil War began. An a...
A Southern Unionist\u27s Story Part of the Civil War in the West series, A Thrilling Narrative: The...
A Personal Look at War Lee and Jackson’s Bloody Twelfth is the third book in the University of Tenne...
Black approaches his subjects “clearly and without prejudice” in chapters dedicated to specific oper...
While Robert Garth Scott\u27s claim that this is the largest collection of Civil War papers to surf...
From the Florida Keys to Havana A Confederate journal of service The steady publication of letters...
Political and military activist The journal of a former slave\u27s fight on the sea and in print D...
Understanding the Later Enlisters Bell Irvin Wiley and Bruce Catton established the primes a hal...
Remembering the Experience from the Ground Up In the vast literature concerning the American Civil W...
Military Memoir A newly annotated edition of Ambrose\u27s account With all due respect to the writ...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Robert Emmett Rodes strode across Douglas Southall Freeman\u27s Lee\u27s Lieutenants as if he step...
Fact and Fiction? Two Accounts of the Civil War Experience Boy Soldier of the Confederacy: The Mem...
This summer marks Civil War Book Review\u27s second anniversary, which I might allow to pass unmenti...
A prosperous Louisiana planter like George Otis Hall normally would have spent the month of February...
Bryan Grimes was a successful planter in Pitt County, North Carolina, when the Civil War began. An a...
A Southern Unionist\u27s Story Part of the Civil War in the West series, A Thrilling Narrative: The...
A Personal Look at War Lee and Jackson’s Bloody Twelfth is the third book in the University of Tenne...
Black approaches his subjects “clearly and without prejudice” in chapters dedicated to specific oper...
While Robert Garth Scott\u27s claim that this is the largest collection of Civil War papers to surf...
From the Florida Keys to Havana A Confederate journal of service The steady publication of letters...
Political and military activist The journal of a former slave\u27s fight on the sea and in print D...
Understanding the Later Enlisters Bell Irvin Wiley and Bruce Catton established the primes a hal...
Remembering the Experience from the Ground Up In the vast literature concerning the American Civil W...
Military Memoir A newly annotated edition of Ambrose\u27s account With all due respect to the writ...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Robert Emmett Rodes strode across Douglas Southall Freeman\u27s Lee\u27s Lieutenants as if he step...