Awful things may be done by neighbor to neighbor in the pressured midst of civil conflict. In the southern states during the Civil War, citizens were persecuted sometimes because they did not show enough enthusiasm for -- or outright opposed -- the Confederate cause. Self-styled defenders of civil o...
Creating community: An Alabama company and a postwar town G. Ward Hubbs companion volumes, Guardi...
Political Partisans Ordering a Conquered ProvinceThe scene is all too familiar. In the aftermath of...
Remembering the Guerrilla War Civil War guerrillas existed in a world cloaked in secrecy as they pa...
textThe historiographical literature on Texas during the Civil War supports the view that a wave o...
Union Prisoners: Heralds of Defeat and Omens of Historical Process For a few months in late 1864 and...
One Community’s Complex Experience with Civil War Many Civil War historians today are focusing o...
Family and Dissent in the South during and after the Civil War Victoria Bynum’s new book expands...
A New Look at a Different Kind of War An old truism warns historians that their books often refl...
The Hatred that War Spawns Walter Brian Cisco\u27s latest book is a thorough catalog of the violenc...
War crimes Essays dissect sinister practice It has become almost trite to note how popular scholar...
In 1978, the historian Richard Cobb published a short book, entitled Death in Paris, about the 400 o...
The “State Line Country” of this book is a rugged area of small farms on the Kentucky-Tennessee bord...
When traveling west along the North Carolina Piedmont, one sees the Blue Ridge rise abruptly, 3,000 ...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Creating community: An Alabama company and a postwar town G. Ward Hubbs companion volumes, Guardi...
Political Partisans Ordering a Conquered ProvinceThe scene is all too familiar. In the aftermath of...
Remembering the Guerrilla War Civil War guerrillas existed in a world cloaked in secrecy as they pa...
textThe historiographical literature on Texas during the Civil War supports the view that a wave o...
Union Prisoners: Heralds of Defeat and Omens of Historical Process For a few months in late 1864 and...
One Community’s Complex Experience with Civil War Many Civil War historians today are focusing o...
Family and Dissent in the South during and after the Civil War Victoria Bynum’s new book expands...
A New Look at a Different Kind of War An old truism warns historians that their books often refl...
The Hatred that War Spawns Walter Brian Cisco\u27s latest book is a thorough catalog of the violenc...
War crimes Essays dissect sinister practice It has become almost trite to note how popular scholar...
In 1978, the historian Richard Cobb published a short book, entitled Death in Paris, about the 400 o...
The “State Line Country” of this book is a rugged area of small farms on the Kentucky-Tennessee bord...
When traveling west along the North Carolina Piedmont, one sees the Blue Ridge rise abruptly, 3,000 ...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Creating community: An Alabama company and a postwar town G. Ward Hubbs companion volumes, Guardi...
Political Partisans Ordering a Conquered ProvinceThe scene is all too familiar. In the aftermath of...
Remembering the Guerrilla War Civil War guerrillas existed in a world cloaked in secrecy as they pa...