Farmer Vs. Farmer: A New Perspective on the Cause of the Civil War Many different theories on why the Civil War took place have been put forward over the years. Slave State versus Free State, Industry versus Agriculture, Federal Power versus State Power, and other conflicts have been used...
In The Cousins\u27 Wars, Kevin Phillips gives a remarkable account of the evolution of today\u27s do...
Review of: To Sow One Acre More: Childbearing and Farm Productivity in the Antebellum North. Craig, ...
An Economic Interpretation of the Coming of the Civil War Most historians readily acknowledge th...
This paper seeks to make clear the root of the American Civil War- economic problems. And in the mea...
Rooting the Republican Party in the Soil Northerners in the mid-nineteenth century had a fundamenta...
Interview with James L. Huston, Regents Professor of History at Oklahoma State University Interviewe...
During the 19th century, the American Civil War between the North and the South began when then pres...
For decades, historians have debated whether or not the persistent Confederate dream of British inte...
This paper examines why the American Civil War took place and what the modern significance of the co...
This inquiry seeks to establish that the American South’s comparative advantage in primary commodity...
There is no mistaking the theme of this passionate book: the Confederacy lost the Civil War because ...
Cotton’s Effect on the Southern Political Economy This excellent book begins by emphasizing the...
Economics and the Confederacy Could it be that the strong central state of the twentieth century—p...
Race Trumps Class Flagging Support Undermines South When Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Nor...
Review of the book The British Gentry, The Southern Planter, and the Northern Family Farmer: Agricul...
In The Cousins\u27 Wars, Kevin Phillips gives a remarkable account of the evolution of today\u27s do...
Review of: To Sow One Acre More: Childbearing and Farm Productivity in the Antebellum North. Craig, ...
An Economic Interpretation of the Coming of the Civil War Most historians readily acknowledge th...
This paper seeks to make clear the root of the American Civil War- economic problems. And in the mea...
Rooting the Republican Party in the Soil Northerners in the mid-nineteenth century had a fundamenta...
Interview with James L. Huston, Regents Professor of History at Oklahoma State University Interviewe...
During the 19th century, the American Civil War between the North and the South began when then pres...
For decades, historians have debated whether or not the persistent Confederate dream of British inte...
This paper examines why the American Civil War took place and what the modern significance of the co...
This inquiry seeks to establish that the American South’s comparative advantage in primary commodity...
There is no mistaking the theme of this passionate book: the Confederacy lost the Civil War because ...
Cotton’s Effect on the Southern Political Economy This excellent book begins by emphasizing the...
Economics and the Confederacy Could it be that the strong central state of the twentieth century—p...
Race Trumps Class Flagging Support Undermines South When Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Nor...
Review of the book The British Gentry, The Southern Planter, and the Northern Family Farmer: Agricul...
In The Cousins\u27 Wars, Kevin Phillips gives a remarkable account of the evolution of today\u27s do...
Review of: To Sow One Acre More: Childbearing and Farm Productivity in the Antebellum North. Craig, ...
An Economic Interpretation of the Coming of the Civil War Most historians readily acknowledge th...