Dividing the West The American West once flanked both sides of the Ohio River and the upper Mississippi. Its peoples shared a regional identity and they intermingled freely. Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd, both born in Kentucky, met and married in Illinois. Joshua Speed, a Kentuckian who lived fo...
Review of: The Civil War in the West: Victory and Defeat From the Appalachians to the Mississippi, ...
Repositioning the Cause of the Civil War According to Stanley Harrold’s important new book, Border W...
Review of: "The Civil War in the West: Victory and Defeat From the Appalachians to the Mississippi,"...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...
Understanding the Vitality of the Border States “I think to lose Kentucky is nearly the same as to l...
Border War The stories of “Bleeding Kansas in the 1850’s and guerillas in Civil War Missouri ar...
Religious Difference and the Making of Unionism before the Civil War In Bonds of Union: Religion, Ra...
Conflicted Loyalties and Postwar Identities in the Border South This important book explores the Civ...
Secession after the Civil War? Of all the latest contributions to the historiography of the Civil Wa...
A Tale of Two Towns This study of the Civil War in Corydon, Indiana, and Frankfort, Kentucky, origin...
Proslavery Kentuckians Saw in the Union the Best Protections for Their Aims In the last half-century...
Focus on Tennessee and Kentucky Sheds Light on the Broader Civil War In Border Wars: The Civil War i...
An Important New Look at the Ohio River Country In the first installment of his magisterial The Road...
As the secession crisis yielded the bitter fruit of civil war in the spring of 1861, Abraham Lincoln...
Restoring the Nation and Reconciling the Past This book engages a substantial body of scholarship th...
Review of: The Civil War in the West: Victory and Defeat From the Appalachians to the Mississippi, ...
Repositioning the Cause of the Civil War According to Stanley Harrold’s important new book, Border W...
Review of: "The Civil War in the West: Victory and Defeat From the Appalachians to the Mississippi,"...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...
Understanding the Vitality of the Border States “I think to lose Kentucky is nearly the same as to l...
Border War The stories of “Bleeding Kansas in the 1850’s and guerillas in Civil War Missouri ar...
Religious Difference and the Making of Unionism before the Civil War In Bonds of Union: Religion, Ra...
Conflicted Loyalties and Postwar Identities in the Border South This important book explores the Civ...
Secession after the Civil War? Of all the latest contributions to the historiography of the Civil Wa...
A Tale of Two Towns This study of the Civil War in Corydon, Indiana, and Frankfort, Kentucky, origin...
Proslavery Kentuckians Saw in the Union the Best Protections for Their Aims In the last half-century...
Focus on Tennessee and Kentucky Sheds Light on the Broader Civil War In Border Wars: The Civil War i...
An Important New Look at the Ohio River Country In the first installment of his magisterial The Road...
As the secession crisis yielded the bitter fruit of civil war in the spring of 1861, Abraham Lincoln...
Restoring the Nation and Reconciling the Past This book engages a substantial body of scholarship th...
Review of: The Civil War in the West: Victory and Defeat From the Appalachians to the Mississippi, ...
Repositioning the Cause of the Civil War According to Stanley Harrold’s important new book, Border W...
Review of: "The Civil War in the West: Victory and Defeat From the Appalachians to the Mississippi,"...