Regimental histories are often lost in an endless sea of Civil War books. Their stories can be similar and pale in popular interest to books addressing topics such as the causes of the Civil War or the lives of famous generals. However, some regiments, by luck or fate, found themselves confronted wi...
After three months in Washington, the Dauphin County Regiment was at last headed south. Resentment i...
The fascination with Civil War soldiering continues to run wide and deep in American society. Eviden...
A fresh look at a lesser known battle As the sesquicentennial celebration of the Civil War continues...
For a regimental history to have an impact on historical literature the author must convey the wider...
War Without Glory: The Trials of the 16th Connecticut Late in the afternoon of September 17, 1862 a ...
Following an Important Confederate Regiment Considering the number of regiments North Carolina suppl...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
The Louisiana Tigers Invade Pennsylvania The Louisiana Tigers renown as a rough and tumble, fearless...
This is the sixth in editor Gary Gallagher\u27s series Military Campaigns of the Civil War, and once...
The Last Battleground consists of forty-three chapters adopted from essays originally published over...
The Ninth New Jersey Remembered For those inclined to believe that involvement in prominent engageme...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
The Final Invasion not the Final Word According to WorldCat, the world’s largest online bibliographi...
Review of: Wilson\u27s Creek: The Second Battle of the Civil War and the Men Who Fought It. Piston, ...
Soldiers accidentally killing their comrades in combat has been an unfortunate and often under-repre...
After three months in Washington, the Dauphin County Regiment was at last headed south. Resentment i...
The fascination with Civil War soldiering continues to run wide and deep in American society. Eviden...
A fresh look at a lesser known battle As the sesquicentennial celebration of the Civil War continues...
For a regimental history to have an impact on historical literature the author must convey the wider...
War Without Glory: The Trials of the 16th Connecticut Late in the afternoon of September 17, 1862 a ...
Following an Important Confederate Regiment Considering the number of regiments North Carolina suppl...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
The Louisiana Tigers Invade Pennsylvania The Louisiana Tigers renown as a rough and tumble, fearless...
This is the sixth in editor Gary Gallagher\u27s series Military Campaigns of the Civil War, and once...
The Last Battleground consists of forty-three chapters adopted from essays originally published over...
The Ninth New Jersey Remembered For those inclined to believe that involvement in prominent engageme...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
The Final Invasion not the Final Word According to WorldCat, the world’s largest online bibliographi...
Review of: Wilson\u27s Creek: The Second Battle of the Civil War and the Men Who Fought It. Piston, ...
Soldiers accidentally killing their comrades in combat has been an unfortunate and often under-repre...
After three months in Washington, the Dauphin County Regiment was at last headed south. Resentment i...
The fascination with Civil War soldiering continues to run wide and deep in American society. Eviden...
A fresh look at a lesser known battle As the sesquicentennial celebration of the Civil War continues...