A Closer Look at Reconstruction in a Southern State Mark L. Bradley, a historian with the U.S. Army Center of Military History, uses North Carolina as a test case to analyze the behavior of the victorious Union army during Reconstruction. Not surprisingly, his findings completely rever...
Bradley R. Clampitt explores the “emotional lives” of Confederates as they transitioned from soldier...
A distinguished unit Story told from black soldiers\u27 perspective Civil War historians have rece...
Southern Reconstruction Mr. Leigh has written several books, including Lee\u27s Lost Dispatch and O...
Though the Civil War ended in April 1865, the conflict between Unionists and Confederates continued....
Race Trumps Class Flagging Support Undermines South When Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Nor...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
“Clayton Butler has breathed life into a phenomenon”—a “’tiny minority’” of white Unionists who foug...
Civil War and Reconstruction in North Carolina Abraham Lincoln did not appear on the ballot in Nor...
The Cultural Work of Military Occupation With Occupied Vicksburg, Bradley R. Clampitt contributes a ...
The Rise and Fall of Reconstruction in Alabama On the first page of Reconstruction in Alabama: From ...
The tumultuous years of the 1860s continues to fascinate Americans long after the truce between Robe...
New Scholarship on the Civil War and Reconstruction in Alabama This volume features fourteen excelle...
The end of Reconstruction involved an intricate interplay of legal rights and remedies with a bloody...
Secession after the Civil War? Of all the latest contributions to the historiography of the Civil Wa...
Historians have long focused on violence’s permeation of the postwar South. However, in The War Afte...
Bradley R. Clampitt explores the “emotional lives” of Confederates as they transitioned from soldier...
A distinguished unit Story told from black soldiers\u27 perspective Civil War historians have rece...
Southern Reconstruction Mr. Leigh has written several books, including Lee\u27s Lost Dispatch and O...
Though the Civil War ended in April 1865, the conflict between Unionists and Confederates continued....
Race Trumps Class Flagging Support Undermines South When Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Nor...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
“Clayton Butler has breathed life into a phenomenon”—a “’tiny minority’” of white Unionists who foug...
Civil War and Reconstruction in North Carolina Abraham Lincoln did not appear on the ballot in Nor...
The Cultural Work of Military Occupation With Occupied Vicksburg, Bradley R. Clampitt contributes a ...
The Rise and Fall of Reconstruction in Alabama On the first page of Reconstruction in Alabama: From ...
The tumultuous years of the 1860s continues to fascinate Americans long after the truce between Robe...
New Scholarship on the Civil War and Reconstruction in Alabama This volume features fourteen excelle...
The end of Reconstruction involved an intricate interplay of legal rights and remedies with a bloody...
Secession after the Civil War? Of all the latest contributions to the historiography of the Civil Wa...
Historians have long focused on violence’s permeation of the postwar South. However, in The War Afte...
Bradley R. Clampitt explores the “emotional lives” of Confederates as they transitioned from soldier...
A distinguished unit Story told from black soldiers\u27 perspective Civil War historians have rece...
Southern Reconstruction Mr. Leigh has written several books, including Lee\u27s Lost Dispatch and O...