Overturning Old Assumptions about Civil War Tactics For the last twenty-five years, military historians of the Civil War have worked diligently to slowly overturn the famous thesis of Civil War combat put forward by Grady McWhiney and Perry Jamieson in 1982. For those unfamiliar with it, ...
This thesis illuminates the state of United States Army tactical doctrine at the beginning of the Ci...
Regular armies have fought and continuously seek outmaneuver the opposing force by several means inc...
A Look at the Role of Field Fortifications in Confederate Defeat In the Trenches at Petersburg c...
Tactical Treatise Author challenges views of combat Was the American Civil War a Napoleonic war fo...
The American Civil War (1861-1865) is one of the United States’ most defining moments. It remains th...
Weaponry and Innovation in the Civil War Earl J. Hess has demonstrated in recent years that he i...
Tactics in the Overland Campaign As we move closer to the Civil War Sesquicentennial, military hist...
Now that we are deep in the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, it is a good time to take some high g...
Historians often emphasize the physical features of battle—terrain, weaponry, troop formations, eart...
Elite vs. amateur West Point and the Commons The study of Civil War generalship has gotten a bit s...
Between 2005 and 2009, Earl J. Hess authored a superb trilogy of books that brought new light to oft...
To evaluate the military performance of the army commanders who led the Union Army of the Potomac an...
In recent years Civil historians have been engaged in some soul-searching as to the direction and in...
Citation: Eastman, Charles. The evolution of infantry and cavalry tactics. (A historical sketch). Se...
Many of the basic tactics used by almost all branches of service in the U.S. were developed during t...
This thesis illuminates the state of United States Army tactical doctrine at the beginning of the Ci...
Regular armies have fought and continuously seek outmaneuver the opposing force by several means inc...
A Look at the Role of Field Fortifications in Confederate Defeat In the Trenches at Petersburg c...
Tactical Treatise Author challenges views of combat Was the American Civil War a Napoleonic war fo...
The American Civil War (1861-1865) is one of the United States’ most defining moments. It remains th...
Weaponry and Innovation in the Civil War Earl J. Hess has demonstrated in recent years that he i...
Tactics in the Overland Campaign As we move closer to the Civil War Sesquicentennial, military hist...
Now that we are deep in the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, it is a good time to take some high g...
Historians often emphasize the physical features of battle—terrain, weaponry, troop formations, eart...
Elite vs. amateur West Point and the Commons The study of Civil War generalship has gotten a bit s...
Between 2005 and 2009, Earl J. Hess authored a superb trilogy of books that brought new light to oft...
To evaluate the military performance of the army commanders who led the Union Army of the Potomac an...
In recent years Civil historians have been engaged in some soul-searching as to the direction and in...
Citation: Eastman, Charles. The evolution of infantry and cavalry tactics. (A historical sketch). Se...
Many of the basic tactics used by almost all branches of service in the U.S. were developed during t...
This thesis illuminates the state of United States Army tactical doctrine at the beginning of the Ci...
Regular armies have fought and continuously seek outmaneuver the opposing force by several means inc...
A Look at the Role of Field Fortifications in Confederate Defeat In the Trenches at Petersburg c...