The Proving Ground for Civil War Leaders Historians have wondered what effect the Mexican War may have had on participants who later went on to lead the great armies of the Civil War. Kevin Doughertyù1983 West Point graduate, former army officer, and history instructor at the University o...
Focusing on senior generals and the enlisted men, Civil War historians have barely examined a wide s...
A New Approach to the Mexican-American War Amy S. Greenberg’s A Wicked War provides an unusual synth...
Combat on the Frontier: Texas Cavalry from the Colonial Period to the Civil War Era Nathan A. Jennin...
Looking at the Pre-Civil War Proving Ground Readers have benefited from several recent treatment...
Migration to Mexico Ex-Confederates moved from one Civil War to another Most Civil War readers a...
Timothy D. Johnson of Nashville’s Lipscomb University has a well-deserved reputation as a leading hi...
Taking Civil War Leaders to Task Kevin Dougherty’s Leadership Lessons: The Campaigns for Vicksburg, ...
Historians have produced a number of full-length monographs on the Mexican War, yet virtually all of...
Answering the Call of Duty in the New Mexico Territory As part of its elaborate plan to win a decisi...
The English novelist C. S. Forester once observed, concerning soldiers in war, that it was a “coinci...
Elite vs. amateur West Point and the Commons The study of Civil War generalship has gotten a bit s...
Students of American military history tend to focus on the nation’s large-scale, conventional confli...
On May 13, 1846, the United States of America declared war on the United Mexican States. In response...
Finding Citizenship in the American West: California’s “Native Cavalry Who maintained control of th...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
Focusing on senior generals and the enlisted men, Civil War historians have barely examined a wide s...
A New Approach to the Mexican-American War Amy S. Greenberg’s A Wicked War provides an unusual synth...
Combat on the Frontier: Texas Cavalry from the Colonial Period to the Civil War Era Nathan A. Jennin...
Looking at the Pre-Civil War Proving Ground Readers have benefited from several recent treatment...
Migration to Mexico Ex-Confederates moved from one Civil War to another Most Civil War readers a...
Timothy D. Johnson of Nashville’s Lipscomb University has a well-deserved reputation as a leading hi...
Taking Civil War Leaders to Task Kevin Dougherty’s Leadership Lessons: The Campaigns for Vicksburg, ...
Historians have produced a number of full-length monographs on the Mexican War, yet virtually all of...
Answering the Call of Duty in the New Mexico Territory As part of its elaborate plan to win a decisi...
The English novelist C. S. Forester once observed, concerning soldiers in war, that it was a “coinci...
Elite vs. amateur West Point and the Commons The study of Civil War generalship has gotten a bit s...
Students of American military history tend to focus on the nation’s large-scale, conventional confli...
On May 13, 1846, the United States of America declared war on the United Mexican States. In response...
Finding Citizenship in the American West: California’s “Native Cavalry Who maintained control of th...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
Focusing on senior generals and the enlisted men, Civil War historians have barely examined a wide s...
A New Approach to the Mexican-American War Amy S. Greenberg’s A Wicked War provides an unusual synth...
Combat on the Frontier: Texas Cavalry from the Colonial Period to the Civil War Era Nathan A. Jennin...