Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, many in the Gulf Coast region worried that flood waters would raise the water table and push airtight coffins to the earth\u27s surface, sending them floating down ci...
A Bloodless Victory explains how the memory of Andrew Jackson’s 8 January 1815 victory at Chalmette ...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
Last spring, at the Mt. Olive Cemetery in my hometown of Knoxville, Tennessee, I attended the 13th a...
It has been a difficult time for the Civil War Book Review and the rest of the Louisiana community t...
Sarah J. Purcell shows how public funerals and grieving of prominent figures of the Civil War era re...
African American Commemorations The Control of Past and a Hold on the Future In 1989 David W. Blig...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
The City of Savannah and the Hard War Scholars are paying increased attention to the role of cit...
The Civil War in the United States was the deadliest conflict faced by Americans during the nineteen...
Scholars of the American South generally end their studies of Confederate memorization just before W...
Fighting the Battle of Memory Remembering the Battle of the Crater: War as Murder by Kevin Levin off...
Examining Florida’s Markers of Memory This book is a valuable contribution to research on Civil War ...
A Bloodless Victory explains how the memory of Andrew Jackson’s 8 January 1815 victory at Chalmette ...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
Last spring, at the Mt. Olive Cemetery in my hometown of Knoxville, Tennessee, I attended the 13th a...
It has been a difficult time for the Civil War Book Review and the rest of the Louisiana community t...
Sarah J. Purcell shows how public funerals and grieving of prominent figures of the Civil War era re...
African American Commemorations The Control of Past and a Hold on the Future In 1989 David W. Blig...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
The City of Savannah and the Hard War Scholars are paying increased attention to the role of cit...
The Civil War in the United States was the deadliest conflict faced by Americans during the nineteen...
Scholars of the American South generally end their studies of Confederate memorization just before W...
Fighting the Battle of Memory Remembering the Battle of the Crater: War as Murder by Kevin Levin off...
Examining Florida’s Markers of Memory This book is a valuable contribution to research on Civil War ...
A Bloodless Victory explains how the memory of Andrew Jackson’s 8 January 1815 victory at Chalmette ...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...