The Influence of Railroads on Southern Society Given the vast scholarship on antebellum railroads, is there really a need for another book on this topic, particularly one largely focused on just the South? Aaron W. Marrs believes there is, especially one that “can help illustrate the t...
Dr. Davis reviews the book Cultivating Race: The Expansion of Slavery in Georgia, 1750 - 1860 by Wat...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
Understanding the Civil War in an Urban Southern Context “Confederate Cities is not an oxymoron. Th...
Aaron W. Marrs challenges the accepted understanding of economic and industrial growth in antebellum...
The scholarship on the middle period of the 19th century in the South has prolifer-ated to such an e...
Technological Advancement and Social Implications Perhaps no technology remade antebellum America mo...
This work examines the emergence of organizational and bureaucratic ideas in the 19th-century South....
Slavery in the Abstract Elite southerners argued in the antebellum era that hierarchy was natural...
Re-examining Southern Industrial Growth Not long ago, when Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman publish...
Most of the debates about race relations focused on the railroads of the New South. Travel was a dif...
The past several years have seen a new energy and heightened scholarly attention to many diverse asp...
Beyond the Coast: A Comprehensive Look at the Slave-Breeding Industry The scholarship and narrative ...
A Railroad That Could Have Been H. Roger Grant has written an interesting book about something that ...
King Cotton and the Transportation Revolution This book is the first in-depth analysis of the relati...
Revealing Technology’s Role in Warfare In The Iron Way: Railroads, the Civil War, and the Making of ...
Dr. Davis reviews the book Cultivating Race: The Expansion of Slavery in Georgia, 1750 - 1860 by Wat...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
Understanding the Civil War in an Urban Southern Context “Confederate Cities is not an oxymoron. Th...
Aaron W. Marrs challenges the accepted understanding of economic and industrial growth in antebellum...
The scholarship on the middle period of the 19th century in the South has prolifer-ated to such an e...
Technological Advancement and Social Implications Perhaps no technology remade antebellum America mo...
This work examines the emergence of organizational and bureaucratic ideas in the 19th-century South....
Slavery in the Abstract Elite southerners argued in the antebellum era that hierarchy was natural...
Re-examining Southern Industrial Growth Not long ago, when Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman publish...
Most of the debates about race relations focused on the railroads of the New South. Travel was a dif...
The past several years have seen a new energy and heightened scholarly attention to many diverse asp...
Beyond the Coast: A Comprehensive Look at the Slave-Breeding Industry The scholarship and narrative ...
A Railroad That Could Have Been H. Roger Grant has written an interesting book about something that ...
King Cotton and the Transportation Revolution This book is the first in-depth analysis of the relati...
Revealing Technology’s Role in Warfare In The Iron Way: Railroads, the Civil War, and the Making of ...
Dr. Davis reviews the book Cultivating Race: The Expansion of Slavery in Georgia, 1750 - 1860 by Wat...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
Understanding the Civil War in an Urban Southern Context “Confederate Cities is not an oxymoron. Th...