Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Culture of Death By Schantz, Mark S. This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War By Faust, Drew Gilpin One of the most memorable scenes in Gone with the Wi...
Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of ...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Understanding the Transformation of a Region Twenty years after Appomattox, in an 1885 Memorial Day ...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Review of: "Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America\u27s Culture of Death," by Mark...
In 2008, Drew Gilpin Faust’s This Republic of Suffering opened the way for what some scholars have s...
Fresh Analysis Considers Civil War’s Horror Scattered throughout Civil War archives, composed deathb...
Inspired by a recent “dark turn” in Civil War historiography, Diane Miller Sommerville’s Aberration ...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
Shannon Bontrager has written an intricate, impressive book about mourning, memory, and national ide...
Sarah J. Purcell shows how public funerals and grieving of prominent figures of the Civil War era re...
This work analyzes how the free, African-American and Irish, Catholic immigrant communities viewed a...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Death was a constant presence in the lives of nineteenth century Americans. Its frequency permeated ...
Do Unto Others Competing groups offered aid to the dying Throughout history it seems the best in p...
Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of ...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Understanding the Transformation of a Region Twenty years after Appomattox, in an 1885 Memorial Day ...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Review of: "Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America\u27s Culture of Death," by Mark...
In 2008, Drew Gilpin Faust’s This Republic of Suffering opened the way for what some scholars have s...
Fresh Analysis Considers Civil War’s Horror Scattered throughout Civil War archives, composed deathb...
Inspired by a recent “dark turn” in Civil War historiography, Diane Miller Sommerville’s Aberration ...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
Shannon Bontrager has written an intricate, impressive book about mourning, memory, and national ide...
Sarah J. Purcell shows how public funerals and grieving of prominent figures of the Civil War era re...
This work analyzes how the free, African-American and Irish, Catholic immigrant communities viewed a...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Death was a constant presence in the lives of nineteenth century Americans. Its frequency permeated ...
Do Unto Others Competing groups offered aid to the dying Throughout history it seems the best in p...
Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of ...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Understanding the Transformation of a Region Twenty years after Appomattox, in an 1885 Memorial Day ...