Approximately 65,000 books have been published on the Civil War plus another 16,000 on Abraham Lincoln—more than one a day since the war ended. But between the study and storytelling, there is a tremendous lack of consensus about what the Civil War means. 150 years later, it is difficult to f...
A New Study of Wartime Washington Walt Whitman, one of the thousands of new residents drawn to Washi...
Lincoln\u27s Pre-Presidential Years It is not surprising that there is strong, sustained interest ...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
The Party May Be Over but the Celebration Has Just Begun February 12, 2009 marked the bicentenni...
Lincoln and the Military by John F. Marszalek Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press Retail P...
The War Worth Fighting edited by Stephen D. Engle Publisher: University Press of Florida Retail Pric...
No president has such a hold on our minds as Abraham Lincoln. He lived at the dawn of photography, ...
In this issue of CWBR, we continue our celebration of the bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln’s birth. ...
Two hundred years ago this month, our nation\u27s sixteenth president was born in a one-room log cab...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
The Meaning of the Civil War On April 5, 1864, Abraham Lincoln penned a letter to a group of schoo...
The superb essays in Lincoln and His Contemporaries were developed from the Centennial Lincoln Sympo...
Interview with Harold Holzer Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CWBR): ...
Reminding Us of the Challenges that Lincoln Faced On the eve of the sesquicentennial of the Amer...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
A New Study of Wartime Washington Walt Whitman, one of the thousands of new residents drawn to Washi...
Lincoln\u27s Pre-Presidential Years It is not surprising that there is strong, sustained interest ...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
The Party May Be Over but the Celebration Has Just Begun February 12, 2009 marked the bicentenni...
Lincoln and the Military by John F. Marszalek Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press Retail P...
The War Worth Fighting edited by Stephen D. Engle Publisher: University Press of Florida Retail Pric...
No president has such a hold on our minds as Abraham Lincoln. He lived at the dawn of photography, ...
In this issue of CWBR, we continue our celebration of the bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln’s birth. ...
Two hundred years ago this month, our nation\u27s sixteenth president was born in a one-room log cab...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
The Meaning of the Civil War On April 5, 1864, Abraham Lincoln penned a letter to a group of schoo...
The superb essays in Lincoln and His Contemporaries were developed from the Centennial Lincoln Sympo...
Interview with Harold Holzer Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CWBR): ...
Reminding Us of the Challenges that Lincoln Faced On the eve of the sesquicentennial of the Amer...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
A New Study of Wartime Washington Walt Whitman, one of the thousands of new residents drawn to Washi...
Lincoln\u27s Pre-Presidential Years It is not surprising that there is strong, sustained interest ...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...