Tactical Treatise Author challenges views of combat Was the American Civil War a Napoleonic war fought poorly by untrained citizen armies, as Paddy Griffith claims in Battle Tactics of the Civil War (1989)? Or was it a modern war that fit within the context of late- ninet...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
Teaching the Civil War A Hands-On Approach When I began teaching the Civil War and Reconstruction,...
Overturning Old Assumptions about Civil War Tactics For the last twenty-five years, military histori...
In recent years Civil historians have been engaged in some soul-searching as to the direction and in...
Now that we are deep in the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, it is a good time to take some high g...
A Savage War and the Foundations of American Military Power Iis nearly a truism that the American Ci...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...
The American Civil War (1861-1865) is one of the United States’ most defining moments. It remains th...
Exceptional or Representative: Technology and the American Civil War When lecturing about the Americ...
Elite vs. amateur West Point and the Commons The study of Civil War generalship has gotten a bit s...
Preeminent Historian Examines the American Civil War John Keegan’s reputation as one of, if not ...
Tactics in the Overland Campaign As we move closer to the Civil War Sesquicentennial, military hist...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
Great bloodbath of chivalry Comprehensive analysis reveals details of clash In his 1732 military w...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
Teaching the Civil War A Hands-On Approach When I began teaching the Civil War and Reconstruction,...
Overturning Old Assumptions about Civil War Tactics For the last twenty-five years, military histori...
In recent years Civil historians have been engaged in some soul-searching as to the direction and in...
Now that we are deep in the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, it is a good time to take some high g...
A Savage War and the Foundations of American Military Power Iis nearly a truism that the American Ci...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...
The American Civil War (1861-1865) is one of the United States’ most defining moments. It remains th...
Exceptional or Representative: Technology and the American Civil War When lecturing about the Americ...
Elite vs. amateur West Point and the Commons The study of Civil War generalship has gotten a bit s...
Preeminent Historian Examines the American Civil War John Keegan’s reputation as one of, if not ...
Tactics in the Overland Campaign As we move closer to the Civil War Sesquicentennial, military hist...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
Great bloodbath of chivalry Comprehensive analysis reveals details of clash In his 1732 military w...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
Teaching the Civil War A Hands-On Approach When I began teaching the Civil War and Reconstruction,...