A Savage War and the Foundations of American Military Power Iis nearly a truism that the American Civil War attracts more writers and readers than any event in United States history. Amateur historians, professional scholars, veterans, social commentators, and journalists have produced some 50,0...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
A Civil War Overview The long and enviable publication record of Steven Woodworth, Professor of Hist...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...
Civil War Guerrillas Most of the history that has been written about the American Civil War conc...
Civil War historians spend so much of their craft on examining the minutiae and the nuts and bolts o...
Surveying the Civil War Brief histories of the Civil War abound, but The American War: A History of ...
Tactical Treatise Author challenges views of combat Was the American Civil War a Napoleonic war fo...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Preeminent Historian Examines the American Civil War John Keegan’s reputation as one of, if not ...
In recent years Civil historians have been engaged in some soul-searching as to the direction and in...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
Review of: Wilson\u27s Creek: The Second Battle of the Civil War and the Men Who Fought It. Piston, ...
A Noted Historian\u27s Thoughts on the Civil War Non-fiction books, especially history, rarely earn...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
A Civil War Overview The long and enviable publication record of Steven Woodworth, Professor of Hist...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...
Civil War Guerrillas Most of the history that has been written about the American Civil War conc...
Civil War historians spend so much of their craft on examining the minutiae and the nuts and bolts o...
Surveying the Civil War Brief histories of the Civil War abound, but The American War: A History of ...
Tactical Treatise Author challenges views of combat Was the American Civil War a Napoleonic war fo...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Preeminent Historian Examines the American Civil War John Keegan’s reputation as one of, if not ...
In recent years Civil historians have been engaged in some soul-searching as to the direction and in...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
Review of: Wilson\u27s Creek: The Second Battle of the Civil War and the Men Who Fought It. Piston, ...
A Noted Historian\u27s Thoughts on the Civil War Non-fiction books, especially history, rarely earn...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
A Civil War Overview The long and enviable publication record of Steven Woodworth, Professor of Hist...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...