Desertion is one of the least understood topics in Civil War studies, though an adequate account of it has implications for several areas of historical research, including life on the home front, morale, and nationalism. The current volume is an important first step in addressing the evolution of de...
Southern Superiority During the past several decades, numerous studies have attempted to trace the ...
Confederate Conscription and the Struggle for Southern Soldiers is thoroughly researched and careful...
Although the American Civil War is often thought of as a sectional contest, southerners not only fou...
Dereliction of Duty Confederate Soldiers going AWOL In the final months of the Civil War, with Un...
Unlike most topics pertaining to the history of the American Civil War, the study of desertion has r...
Drawing from the experiences of 3,126 enlisted men from North Carolina who fought for the Confederac...
The Will to Go On Pick up any history of the Civil War, and at some point a discussion of morale com...
Internal opposition Economic disparity was Confederacy\u27s downfall The question of Confederate u...
Bradley R. Clampitt explores the “emotional lives” of Confederates as they transitioned from soldier...
The following is a study of the collapse of the Confederacy during the American Civil War. This· stu...
The problem of desertion in the policy of the Confederate States of America (1861-1865)In this artic...
Traditionally, regiments have most often been identified with the shared experiences of the common s...
Elite vs. amateur West Point and the Commons The study of Civil War generalship has gotten a bit s...
Understanding the Relationship Between Homefront and Battlefield One of the most durable debates re...
Under which circumstances do soldiers and officers desert in a violent domestic conflict? This artic...
Southern Superiority During the past several decades, numerous studies have attempted to trace the ...
Confederate Conscription and the Struggle for Southern Soldiers is thoroughly researched and careful...
Although the American Civil War is often thought of as a sectional contest, southerners not only fou...
Dereliction of Duty Confederate Soldiers going AWOL In the final months of the Civil War, with Un...
Unlike most topics pertaining to the history of the American Civil War, the study of desertion has r...
Drawing from the experiences of 3,126 enlisted men from North Carolina who fought for the Confederac...
The Will to Go On Pick up any history of the Civil War, and at some point a discussion of morale com...
Internal opposition Economic disparity was Confederacy\u27s downfall The question of Confederate u...
Bradley R. Clampitt explores the “emotional lives” of Confederates as they transitioned from soldier...
The following is a study of the collapse of the Confederacy during the American Civil War. This· stu...
The problem of desertion in the policy of the Confederate States of America (1861-1865)In this artic...
Traditionally, regiments have most often been identified with the shared experiences of the common s...
Elite vs. amateur West Point and the Commons The study of Civil War generalship has gotten a bit s...
Understanding the Relationship Between Homefront and Battlefield One of the most durable debates re...
Under which circumstances do soldiers and officers desert in a violent domestic conflict? This artic...
Southern Superiority During the past several decades, numerous studies have attempted to trace the ...
Confederate Conscription and the Struggle for Southern Soldiers is thoroughly researched and careful...
Although the American Civil War is often thought of as a sectional contest, southerners not only fou...