The Civil War as an Agent of Change Originally published in 2001, under the title Civil War Firsts: The Legacies of America\u27s Bloodiest Conflict, Gerald S. Henig and Eric Niderost\u27s reprint edition, A Nation Transformed: How the Civil War Changed America Forever, is a compila...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
Most literature on the Civil War focuses on soldiers, battles, and politics. But for every soldier i...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
The Civil War’s Long Shadow Coming on the heels of social unrest in St. Louis County and released am...
We often study history so that we can better understand ourselves, so that we can understand how eve...
Review of: Civil War Congress and the Creation of Modern America: A Revolution on the Home Front, ed...
From contract to devotion New study analyzes contributing factors in development of nationalism Th...
Bringing the Law Into Dialogue with Civil War History A long-running debate among American historian...
Civil War historians spend so much of their craft on examining the minutiae and the nuts and bolts o...
Since the smoke cleared from battlefields across the United States and the guns of the Civil War’s c...
Understanding the Civil War in a Broader Context Andre Fleche adds to the burgeoning literature on t...
New Approach to the Civil War’s Legacy No American in the spring of 1861, Northerner or Southerner, ...
The Economics of the Civil War Mobilizing Soldiers and the Homefront It seems hard to believe ther...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
Most literature on the Civil War focuses on soldiers, battles, and politics. But for every soldier i...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
The Civil War’s Long Shadow Coming on the heels of social unrest in St. Louis County and released am...
We often study history so that we can better understand ourselves, so that we can understand how eve...
Review of: Civil War Congress and the Creation of Modern America: A Revolution on the Home Front, ed...
From contract to devotion New study analyzes contributing factors in development of nationalism Th...
Bringing the Law Into Dialogue with Civil War History A long-running debate among American historian...
Civil War historians spend so much of their craft on examining the minutiae and the nuts and bolts o...
Since the smoke cleared from battlefields across the United States and the guns of the Civil War’s c...
Understanding the Civil War in a Broader Context Andre Fleche adds to the burgeoning literature on t...
New Approach to the Civil War’s Legacy No American in the spring of 1861, Northerner or Southerner, ...
The Economics of the Civil War Mobilizing Soldiers and the Homefront It seems hard to believe ther...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...