Looking at the Pre-Civil War Proving Ground Readers have benefited from several recent treatments of the Mexican War, including A Gallant Little Army (2007), Timothy Johnson’s well-received chronicle of Winfield Scott’s Mexico City Campaign. However, if the Mexican War has been ...
David W. Levy Prize finalist, Fall 2017The Mexican-American War significantly expanded the territori...
Albert Castel has produced another fine book in Tom Taylor\u27s Civil War, a close look at a field o...
Riding with General Jo Shelby Joseph Orville (Jo) Shelby (1830-1897) surely lived one of the most fa...
The Proving Ground for Civil War Leaders Historians have wondered what effect the Mexican War may h...
Migration to Mexico Ex-Confederates moved from one Civil War to another Most Civil War readers a...
A New Approach to the Mexican-American War Amy S. Greenberg’s A Wicked War provides an unusual synth...
I don\u27t believe any writer could create a fictional war better than the truth of the Civil War. T...
Timothy D. Johnson of Nashville’s Lipscomb University has a well-deserved reputation as a leading hi...
A reprint of two separate works: General Taylor and his staff, Philadelphia, Grigg, Elliot & co., 18...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
Historians have produced a number of full-length monographs on the Mexican War, yet virtually all of...
Book review of Mr. Polk\u27s Army: The American Military Experience in the Mexican War. By Richard B...
May 13, 1996, marks the sesquicentennial anniversary of the United States\u27 declaration of war aga...
Trials and Tribulations Along the Red River In recent years, historians have paid increased attentio...
The English novelist C. S. Forester once observed, concerning soldiers in war, that it was a “coinci...
David W. Levy Prize finalist, Fall 2017The Mexican-American War significantly expanded the territori...
Albert Castel has produced another fine book in Tom Taylor\u27s Civil War, a close look at a field o...
Riding with General Jo Shelby Joseph Orville (Jo) Shelby (1830-1897) surely lived one of the most fa...
The Proving Ground for Civil War Leaders Historians have wondered what effect the Mexican War may h...
Migration to Mexico Ex-Confederates moved from one Civil War to another Most Civil War readers a...
A New Approach to the Mexican-American War Amy S. Greenberg’s A Wicked War provides an unusual synth...
I don\u27t believe any writer could create a fictional war better than the truth of the Civil War. T...
Timothy D. Johnson of Nashville’s Lipscomb University has a well-deserved reputation as a leading hi...
A reprint of two separate works: General Taylor and his staff, Philadelphia, Grigg, Elliot & co., 18...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
Historians have produced a number of full-length monographs on the Mexican War, yet virtually all of...
Book review of Mr. Polk\u27s Army: The American Military Experience in the Mexican War. By Richard B...
May 13, 1996, marks the sesquicentennial anniversary of the United States\u27 declaration of war aga...
Trials and Tribulations Along the Red River In recent years, historians have paid increased attentio...
The English novelist C. S. Forester once observed, concerning soldiers in war, that it was a “coinci...
David W. Levy Prize finalist, Fall 2017The Mexican-American War significantly expanded the territori...
Albert Castel has produced another fine book in Tom Taylor\u27s Civil War, a close look at a field o...
Riding with General Jo Shelby Joseph Orville (Jo) Shelby (1830-1897) surely lived one of the most fa...