This summer marks Civil War Book Review\u27s second anniversary, which I might allow to pass unmentioned but for the fact that this issue is my final one. I might close our association on these pages by recalling how several visitors to the South during the Civil War perceived the terrain. For m...
a brilliant attorney and political insider, William Pitt Ballinger was one of the most powerful men ...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
It has been a difficult time for the Civil War Book Review and the rest of the Louisiana community t...
This is the sixth in editor Gary Gallagher\u27s series Military Campaigns of the Civil War, and once...
Civil War Book Review (cwbr): What first attracted you to the Civil War? Webb Garrison (wg): All of...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
A Southern Unionist\u27s Story Part of the Civil War in the West series, A Thrilling Narrative: The...
A prosperous Louisiana planter like George Otis Hall normally would have spent the month of February...
The Louisiana Tigers Invade Pennsylvania The Louisiana Tigers renown as a rough and tumble, fearless...
Schoolgirl and Sailor: Valuable Perspectives on Disunion and War The American Civil War had a titani...
Growing up as a young boy in Iowa and fascinated with history, I learned the simple version of the A...
As we approach the Civil War Sesquicentennial, one begins to wonder how we can possibly find anythin...
a brilliant attorney and political insider, William Pitt Ballinger was one of the most powerful men ...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
It has been a difficult time for the Civil War Book Review and the rest of the Louisiana community t...
This is the sixth in editor Gary Gallagher\u27s series Military Campaigns of the Civil War, and once...
Civil War Book Review (cwbr): What first attracted you to the Civil War? Webb Garrison (wg): All of...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
A Southern Unionist\u27s Story Part of the Civil War in the West series, A Thrilling Narrative: The...
A prosperous Louisiana planter like George Otis Hall normally would have spent the month of February...
The Louisiana Tigers Invade Pennsylvania The Louisiana Tigers renown as a rough and tumble, fearless...
Schoolgirl and Sailor: Valuable Perspectives on Disunion and War The American Civil War had a titani...
Growing up as a young boy in Iowa and fascinated with history, I learned the simple version of the A...
As we approach the Civil War Sesquicentennial, one begins to wonder how we can possibly find anythin...
a brilliant attorney and political insider, William Pitt Ballinger was one of the most powerful men ...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...