Flood Tide: A Decisive Moment Philip Leigh\u27s book, The Confederacy at Flood Tide, begins with the Peninsula Campaign, the beginning of the flood tide, and ends with the Emancipation Proclamation, the most decisive event of the flood-tide period (204). The author lays out his theses in the...
Exploring Lee’s High Tide Jeffry Wert, a free-lance historian of the Civil War, focuses on the Easte...
A New Look at a Pivotal Campaign Stephen Sears, Richard Slotkin, Joseph Harsh, and Civil War veteran...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
Civil War Watershed I have had the privilege of tramping the hallowed fields of Gettysburg sever...
Water power: The campaign to control the Mississippi On July 9, 1863, Port Hudson, the last Confe...
The Rise and Fall of the Army of Northern Virginia Historians of the U.S. Civil War era do not l...
The Overland Campaign as a Shift in Warfare In the spring of 1864, after three years of conflict, th...
A fourth volume in the University of Nebraska\u27s Great Campaigns of the Civil War series, Banner...
When Robert E. Lee took command of the Army of Northern Virginia, the Confederacy had reached desper...
A Focused Study of the Louisiana Tigers at Gettysburg Scott L. Mingus’s The Louisiana Tigers in...
An Essay Collection Providing a New Look at a New Campaign In The Vicksburg Campaign: March 29 – May...
Command and Leadership in the Antietam Campaign The University of Nebraska Press\u27s Great Campai...
Chronicling the Secession Winter Civil war histories come either in very long books, even series of...
Seeking to Answer Why the Army of Northern Virginia Lost On the morning of May 3, 1863, one of t...
The award-winning Taken at the Flood: Robert E. Lee & Confederate Strategy in the Maryland Campaign ...
Exploring Lee’s High Tide Jeffry Wert, a free-lance historian of the Civil War, focuses on the Easte...
A New Look at a Pivotal Campaign Stephen Sears, Richard Slotkin, Joseph Harsh, and Civil War veteran...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...
Civil War Watershed I have had the privilege of tramping the hallowed fields of Gettysburg sever...
Water power: The campaign to control the Mississippi On July 9, 1863, Port Hudson, the last Confe...
The Rise and Fall of the Army of Northern Virginia Historians of the U.S. Civil War era do not l...
The Overland Campaign as a Shift in Warfare In the spring of 1864, after three years of conflict, th...
A fourth volume in the University of Nebraska\u27s Great Campaigns of the Civil War series, Banner...
When Robert E. Lee took command of the Army of Northern Virginia, the Confederacy had reached desper...
A Focused Study of the Louisiana Tigers at Gettysburg Scott L. Mingus’s The Louisiana Tigers in...
An Essay Collection Providing a New Look at a New Campaign In The Vicksburg Campaign: March 29 – May...
Command and Leadership in the Antietam Campaign The University of Nebraska Press\u27s Great Campai...
Chronicling the Secession Winter Civil war histories come either in very long books, even series of...
Seeking to Answer Why the Army of Northern Virginia Lost On the morning of May 3, 1863, one of t...
The award-winning Taken at the Flood: Robert E. Lee & Confederate Strategy in the Maryland Campaign ...
Exploring Lee’s High Tide Jeffry Wert, a free-lance historian of the Civil War, focuses on the Easte...
A New Look at a Pivotal Campaign Stephen Sears, Richard Slotkin, Joseph Harsh, and Civil War veteran...
Once in a great while the publication of a book represents a passing of the torch from one generatio...