Prosecuting the Union Naval Blockade This book is the third installment of Robert Browning Jr.’s exhaustive history of the Union Navy’s Civil War blockade of the South, previous volumes having surveyed the activities of the North Atlantic (1993) and South Atlantic (2002) Blockading Squadro...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 307-319) and index.The overt acts -- Fort Sumter and Fort Pi...
The Union Navy\u27s Campaign to Control the Mississippi River Although it has received less attentio...
Showing the Importance of a Lesser Known Naval Squadron Few historians write about the naval aspects...
On April 19, 1861, one week into the Civil War, President Lincoln announced his plan to blockade all...
War on the Mississippi In the growing body of literature on the naval aspects of the American Civil...
Lincoln and the Navy Commanding Lincoln’s Navy provides a broad examination of the Union Navy du...
A Look at Great Britain’s Role in Building the Confederate Navy In 1860, the United States had t...
The Union’s Naval Command The recent string of books on the Union and Confederate navies demonstra...
War on the High Seas and Harbors An Overview of Naval Campaigns The Civil War may, as is often c...
During the Civil War, the Union Navy’s primary mission was to prevent the South from marketing her p...
Foreign Diplomacy and the War Against the Confederate Navy Although most Americans consider the Civ...
Diplomatic wrangling An international perspective At the time of his death, Frank J. Merli was pre...
President Lincoln proclaimed the blockade of all Confederate ports on April 19, 1861. In order to ma...
Savannah sailors aboard the Standard Coastal Georgians relied on blockade runners\u27 success When...
A paper to be included in a volume devoted to the comparison to the comparative history of blockages...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 307-319) and index.The overt acts -- Fort Sumter and Fort Pi...
The Union Navy\u27s Campaign to Control the Mississippi River Although it has received less attentio...
Showing the Importance of a Lesser Known Naval Squadron Few historians write about the naval aspects...
On April 19, 1861, one week into the Civil War, President Lincoln announced his plan to blockade all...
War on the Mississippi In the growing body of literature on the naval aspects of the American Civil...
Lincoln and the Navy Commanding Lincoln’s Navy provides a broad examination of the Union Navy du...
A Look at Great Britain’s Role in Building the Confederate Navy In 1860, the United States had t...
The Union’s Naval Command The recent string of books on the Union and Confederate navies demonstra...
War on the High Seas and Harbors An Overview of Naval Campaigns The Civil War may, as is often c...
During the Civil War, the Union Navy’s primary mission was to prevent the South from marketing her p...
Foreign Diplomacy and the War Against the Confederate Navy Although most Americans consider the Civ...
Diplomatic wrangling An international perspective At the time of his death, Frank J. Merli was pre...
President Lincoln proclaimed the blockade of all Confederate ports on April 19, 1861. In order to ma...
Savannah sailors aboard the Standard Coastal Georgians relied on blockade runners\u27 success When...
A paper to be included in a volume devoted to the comparison to the comparative history of blockages...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 307-319) and index.The overt acts -- Fort Sumter and Fort Pi...
The Union Navy\u27s Campaign to Control the Mississippi River Although it has received less attentio...
Showing the Importance of a Lesser Known Naval Squadron Few historians write about the naval aspects...