Common Soldiers, Uncommon Historian More than a few of my fellow graduate students in the seminar on the Civil War and Reconstruction at the University of Kentucky in the fall of 1977 were there because they had been influenced by Bell Wiley’s writings. Wiley, the man Life magazine...
This thesis examines the role of memory in the American Civil War. More importantly, it discusses th...
a brilliant attorney and political insider, William Pitt Ballinger was one of the most powerful men ...
Merging Home Front and Battle Front Wallace Hettle, Professor of History at the University of Northe...
Soldier\u27s story Comprehensive anthology features seminal scholarship The Civil War enthusiast i...
In an interview with a Baton Rouge radio station in 1968, John Hazard Wildman, an author and English...
Honoring a Giant in Southern History I vividly remember the first time I read Bertram Wyatt-Brown\u2...
This summer marks Civil War Book Review\u27s second anniversary, which I might allow to pass unmenti...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Civil War Scholarship Remains in Good Hands While it is easy to question how anyone can possibly...
A Study of how we Remember In this slender volume, a revised version of his Lamar Memorial Lectures ...
Abstract: A variety of reprinted and clipped articles from various journals, magazines, and newspape...
Looking at John Bell Hood in a New Light John Bell Hood holds an eminent position among the American...
Once in a generation it seems, a historian writes a book that literally changes the landscape of the...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
This thesis examines the role of memory in the American Civil War. More importantly, it discusses th...
a brilliant attorney and political insider, William Pitt Ballinger was one of the most powerful men ...
Merging Home Front and Battle Front Wallace Hettle, Professor of History at the University of Northe...
Soldier\u27s story Comprehensive anthology features seminal scholarship The Civil War enthusiast i...
In an interview with a Baton Rouge radio station in 1968, John Hazard Wildman, an author and English...
Honoring a Giant in Southern History I vividly remember the first time I read Bertram Wyatt-Brown\u2...
This summer marks Civil War Book Review\u27s second anniversary, which I might allow to pass unmenti...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Civil War Scholarship Remains in Good Hands While it is easy to question how anyone can possibly...
A Study of how we Remember In this slender volume, a revised version of his Lamar Memorial Lectures ...
Abstract: A variety of reprinted and clipped articles from various journals, magazines, and newspape...
Looking at John Bell Hood in a New Light John Bell Hood holds an eminent position among the American...
Once in a generation it seems, a historian writes a book that literally changes the landscape of the...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
This thesis examines the role of memory in the American Civil War. More importantly, it discusses th...
a brilliant attorney and political insider, William Pitt Ballinger was one of the most powerful men ...
Merging Home Front and Battle Front Wallace Hettle, Professor of History at the University of Northe...