A New View into Confederate Veteran Families In 1895, Confederate veteran W.H. Power submitted a pension application to the Commonwealth of Virginia. “There are many things I can’t do now, he explained. Wartime wounds to his right arm and leg had rendered him lame and prevented him fro...
The Old Dominion\u27s Civil WarA New Look at Virginia This anthology features contributions from ei...
In September 1862, manpower shortages forced Confederate officials to hire civilian employees in mil...
In September 1862, the Confederate Congress authorized hospitals to employ white women as chief matr...
Virginia\u27s Confederate pensions for veterans and their widows began in 1888. This financial relie...
Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan can turn to entities from the Federal Government to Hire Heroes USA...
A New Look at Civil War Veterans It has sometimes been claimed that Kentucky is more Confederate...
Bradley R. Clampitt explores the “emotional lives” of Confederates as they transitioned from soldier...
Understanding the Relationship Between Homefront and Battlefield One of the most durable debates re...
The Civil War, more than any other conflict in American history, left a legacy of maimed and disable...
Returning Home Presented a Daunting Challenge for Civil War Veterans Brian Matthew Jordan’s Marching...
The article shows how the divide among the United Confederate Veterans in Charleston, West Virginia,...
In 1860, few destitute white citizens lived in Mississippi, and they were supported by their home co...
Undergraduate Honors ThesisFollowing the end of the Civil War, Confederate veterans returned to a ho...
Much scholarship has focused on the experiences of soldiers in the American Civil War (1861-1865), a...
Before the final shot of the Civil War rang out, the phrase a rich man\u27s war, poor man\u27s figh...
The Old Dominion\u27s Civil WarA New Look at Virginia This anthology features contributions from ei...
In September 1862, manpower shortages forced Confederate officials to hire civilian employees in mil...
In September 1862, the Confederate Congress authorized hospitals to employ white women as chief matr...
Virginia\u27s Confederate pensions for veterans and their widows began in 1888. This financial relie...
Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan can turn to entities from the Federal Government to Hire Heroes USA...
A New Look at Civil War Veterans It has sometimes been claimed that Kentucky is more Confederate...
Bradley R. Clampitt explores the “emotional lives” of Confederates as they transitioned from soldier...
Understanding the Relationship Between Homefront and Battlefield One of the most durable debates re...
The Civil War, more than any other conflict in American history, left a legacy of maimed and disable...
Returning Home Presented a Daunting Challenge for Civil War Veterans Brian Matthew Jordan’s Marching...
The article shows how the divide among the United Confederate Veterans in Charleston, West Virginia,...
In 1860, few destitute white citizens lived in Mississippi, and they were supported by their home co...
Undergraduate Honors ThesisFollowing the end of the Civil War, Confederate veterans returned to a ho...
Much scholarship has focused on the experiences of soldiers in the American Civil War (1861-1865), a...
Before the final shot of the Civil War rang out, the phrase a rich man\u27s war, poor man\u27s figh...
The Old Dominion\u27s Civil WarA New Look at Virginia This anthology features contributions from ei...
In September 1862, manpower shortages forced Confederate officials to hire civilian employees in mil...
In September 1862, the Confederate Congress authorized hospitals to employ white women as chief matr...