The Comforts of Sleep and Bonds of Intimacy Think of a Civil War battlefield and visions of blood, smoke, fire, mutilation, and the cries of the wounded and the dying come to mind. George W. Peck, an infantryman from Wisconsin, surely witnessed his share of those horrors. But when he fell asleep...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Bringing the War (and a Series) to a Close On January 1, 1865, in Richmond, Virginia, Judith Brocken...
I conceived this column in a dream early one morning and I am writing it soon after. In Faulkner\...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
A note received any day letting you know a son is gravely wounded is horrible. Receiving it on the f...
The fireflies have started to appear around Gettysburg. We have a new sliding glass door in the kitc...
All Americans, in one way or another, felt the effects of the Civil War. Relatively few, however, ex...
The Role of Dreams in Understanding Great Men Historian and author, Andrew Burstein, brings consider...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...
Fresh Analysis Considers Civil War’s Horror Scattered throughout Civil War archives, composed deathb...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Understanding Civil Rights-Era Commemoration The Civil War and the Civil Rights Movement are “foreve...
Revising Old Narratives of Guerrilla Warfare during the Civil War This very valuable collection buil...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Bringing the War (and a Series) to a Close On January 1, 1865, in Richmond, Virginia, Judith Brocken...
I conceived this column in a dream early one morning and I am writing it soon after. In Faulkner\...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
A note received any day letting you know a son is gravely wounded is horrible. Receiving it on the f...
The fireflies have started to appear around Gettysburg. We have a new sliding glass door in the kitc...
All Americans, in one way or another, felt the effects of the Civil War. Relatively few, however, ex...
The Role of Dreams in Understanding Great Men Historian and author, Andrew Burstein, brings consider...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...
Fresh Analysis Considers Civil War’s Horror Scattered throughout Civil War archives, composed deathb...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Understanding Civil Rights-Era Commemoration The Civil War and the Civil Rights Movement are “foreve...
Revising Old Narratives of Guerrilla Warfare during the Civil War This very valuable collection buil...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Bringing the War (and a Series) to a Close On January 1, 1865, in Richmond, Virginia, Judith Brocken...