A pocket of Promised Land Challenging antebellum assumptions Some historians have argued--or at least, assumed--that the 1830s was a turning point in Southern race relations. In that decade, the South moved from a place that thought twice about the goodness of human bondage to on...
The Idealized West and Reconstruction West from Appomattox by Heather Cox Richardson offers an ambi...
Understanding Slavery When in the 1950s mainstream historians rediscovered slavery as the prime cau...
Emancipation began with a flickering promise, burned intensely for a few years during Reconstruction...
In a strange land Scholar reunites American and African-American histories Between 1787 and 1791,...
African-Americans in postbellum Norfolk, Virginia, as elsewhere, knew that merely gaining freedom th...
Until quite recently, most of what we knew about antebellum slavery and the African-American experie...
Prospects for Peace in a War-torn Country What duty does a victorious nation have to help rebuild a...
Adam Rothman is an associate professor of history at Georgetown University, where he teaches courses...
Interview with Richard R. Duncan Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CWBR)...
Reconstruction Reconsidered How did American slavery end, and what meanings can be derived from its ...
Why did Reconstruction fail? Perspectives on post-war African-American politics Over the past sev...
Southern viewThe export economy of the South has contributed a distinct legacy to the rest of Americ...
During the antebellum period, free African Americans living in the Southern United States were a thi...
An Anything but Peculiar Institution Slavery in a World Perspective Few historians have written ...
Beyond Race and Slavery A New Perspective on the Southern Mind Historians have waited a long time...
The Idealized West and Reconstruction West from Appomattox by Heather Cox Richardson offers an ambi...
Understanding Slavery When in the 1950s mainstream historians rediscovered slavery as the prime cau...
Emancipation began with a flickering promise, burned intensely for a few years during Reconstruction...
In a strange land Scholar reunites American and African-American histories Between 1787 and 1791,...
African-Americans in postbellum Norfolk, Virginia, as elsewhere, knew that merely gaining freedom th...
Until quite recently, most of what we knew about antebellum slavery and the African-American experie...
Prospects for Peace in a War-torn Country What duty does a victorious nation have to help rebuild a...
Adam Rothman is an associate professor of history at Georgetown University, where he teaches courses...
Interview with Richard R. Duncan Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CWBR)...
Reconstruction Reconsidered How did American slavery end, and what meanings can be derived from its ...
Why did Reconstruction fail? Perspectives on post-war African-American politics Over the past sev...
Southern viewThe export economy of the South has contributed a distinct legacy to the rest of Americ...
During the antebellum period, free African Americans living in the Southern United States were a thi...
An Anything but Peculiar Institution Slavery in a World Perspective Few historians have written ...
Beyond Race and Slavery A New Perspective on the Southern Mind Historians have waited a long time...
The Idealized West and Reconstruction West from Appomattox by Heather Cox Richardson offers an ambi...
Understanding Slavery When in the 1950s mainstream historians rediscovered slavery as the prime cau...
Emancipation began with a flickering promise, burned intensely for a few years during Reconstruction...