Religious Difference and the Making of Unionism before the Civil War In Bonds of Union: Religion, Race, and Politics in a Civil War Borderland, Bridget Ford argues that Civil War-era Americans living in Ohio and Kentucky forged communal ties through urbanization that were strong enough to s...
Repositioning the Cause of the Civil War According to Stanley Harrold’s important new book, Border W...
Understanding the Vitality of the Border States “I think to lose Kentucky is nearly the same as to l...
Civil War historiography has been well served by the recent proliferation of borderland studies. Thi...
Review of: Bridget Ford. Bonds of Union: Religion, Race, and Politics in a Civil War Borderland. Cha...
Review of: "Bonds of Union: Religion, Race, and Politics in a Civil War Borderland/The Rivers Ran Ba...
Dividing the West The American West once flanked both sides of the Ohio River and the upper Mississi...
Even as the Civil War still raged, interested observers knew that religion had brought on and sustai...
The Failure of Antislavery and the Creation of a Confederate Identity in Kentucky As a border state ...
Conflicted Loyalties and Postwar Identities in the Border South This important book explores the Civ...
Proslavery Kentuckians Saw in the Union the Best Protections for Their Aims In the last half-century...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...
An Important New Look at the Ohio River Country In the first installment of his magisterial The Road...
A Tale of Two Towns This study of the Civil War in Corydon, Indiana, and Frankfort, Kentucky, origin...
Focus on Tennessee and Kentucky Sheds Light on the Broader Civil War In Border Wars: The Civil War i...
A Look at Race and the Union Army in the American West Nearly 150 years later, the Civil War con...
Repositioning the Cause of the Civil War According to Stanley Harrold’s important new book, Border W...
Understanding the Vitality of the Border States “I think to lose Kentucky is nearly the same as to l...
Civil War historiography has been well served by the recent proliferation of borderland studies. Thi...
Review of: Bridget Ford. Bonds of Union: Religion, Race, and Politics in a Civil War Borderland. Cha...
Review of: "Bonds of Union: Religion, Race, and Politics in a Civil War Borderland/The Rivers Ran Ba...
Dividing the West The American West once flanked both sides of the Ohio River and the upper Mississi...
Even as the Civil War still raged, interested observers knew that religion had brought on and sustai...
The Failure of Antislavery and the Creation of a Confederate Identity in Kentucky As a border state ...
Conflicted Loyalties and Postwar Identities in the Border South This important book explores the Civ...
Proslavery Kentuckians Saw in the Union the Best Protections for Their Aims In the last half-century...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...
An Important New Look at the Ohio River Country In the first installment of his magisterial The Road...
A Tale of Two Towns This study of the Civil War in Corydon, Indiana, and Frankfort, Kentucky, origin...
Focus on Tennessee and Kentucky Sheds Light on the Broader Civil War In Border Wars: The Civil War i...
A Look at Race and the Union Army in the American West Nearly 150 years later, the Civil War con...
Repositioning the Cause of the Civil War According to Stanley Harrold’s important new book, Border W...
Understanding the Vitality of the Border States “I think to lose Kentucky is nearly the same as to l...
Civil War historiography has been well served by the recent proliferation of borderland studies. Thi...