Hometown heroes A Carolina war chronicle When he conceived Charlestonians In War: The Charleston Battalion, author W. Chris Phelps debunked the old adage prevalent among the laity that there couldn\u27t possibly be anything new to be written about the American Civil War. Up t...
Traditionally, regiments have most often been identified with the shared experiences of the common s...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
Creating community: An Alabama company and a postwar town G. Ward Hubbs companion volumes, Guardi...
The Ninth New Jersey Remembered For those inclined to believe that involvement in prominent engageme...
Confederate Commemoration in the Palmetto State First, this book is not about artillery. Nor is it a...
The Siege Mentality of Slavery Few historians are likely aware that Charleston is the site of the lo...
Military Memoir A newly annotated edition of Ambrose\u27s account With all due respect to the writ...
Following an Important Confederate Regiment Considering the number of regiments North Carolina suppl...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
For a regimental history to have an impact on historical literature the author must convey the wider...
The Louisiana Tigers Invade Pennsylvania The Louisiana Tigers renown as a rough and tumble, fearless...
Regimental histories are often lost in an endless sea of Civil War books. Their stories can be simil...
Study of a Little Known Louisiana Unit Gallant Creoles is an ambitious retelling of Civil War experi...
A Closer Look at Reconstruction in a Southern State Mark L. Bradley, a historian with the U.S. A...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Traditionally, regiments have most often been identified with the shared experiences of the common s...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
Creating community: An Alabama company and a postwar town G. Ward Hubbs companion volumes, Guardi...
The Ninth New Jersey Remembered For those inclined to believe that involvement in prominent engageme...
Confederate Commemoration in the Palmetto State First, this book is not about artillery. Nor is it a...
The Siege Mentality of Slavery Few historians are likely aware that Charleston is the site of the lo...
Military Memoir A newly annotated edition of Ambrose\u27s account With all due respect to the writ...
Following an Important Confederate Regiment Considering the number of regiments North Carolina suppl...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
For a regimental history to have an impact on historical literature the author must convey the wider...
The Louisiana Tigers Invade Pennsylvania The Louisiana Tigers renown as a rough and tumble, fearless...
Regimental histories are often lost in an endless sea of Civil War books. Their stories can be simil...
Study of a Little Known Louisiana Unit Gallant Creoles is an ambitious retelling of Civil War experi...
A Closer Look at Reconstruction in a Southern State Mark L. Bradley, a historian with the U.S. A...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Traditionally, regiments have most often been identified with the shared experiences of the common s...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
Creating community: An Alabama company and a postwar town G. Ward Hubbs companion volumes, Guardi...