Hood Starts a Downward Spiral Civil War scholars have long recognized William T. Sherman’s 1864 Atlanta Campaign as a critically important turning point in the conflict. Sherman’s success in Georgia helped ensure Abraham Lincoln’s reelection and, ultimately, Union victory. Yet Sherman’s c...
The purpose of the paper The Battle of Atlanta was to examine the campaigns between the Union Army...
Analyzing Sherman’s March In Sherman’s March in Myth and Memory, Edward Caudill and Paul Ashdown...
During the first week of July, 1864, the powerful “Army Group” commanded by Major General William T....
Foreshadowing the Fall: A Prelude On July 20, 1864, Union and Confederate forces clashed on the nort...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...
“It hastened what we all fought for, the end of the war: General Sherman’s campaigns through Atlanta...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
Looking at John Bell Hood in a New Light John Bell Hood holds an eminent position among the American...
In the popular imagination, the image of Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant amicably discussing surr...
In Atlanta 1864, Richard McMurry ably retraces the familiar scholarly analysis of Confederate comman...
Confederate army had long odds Could Hood\u27s gamble have paid off? Nashville: The Western Confe...
Reviewer Thomas F. Army writes that in The Siege of Vicksburg: Climax of the Campaign to Open the Mi...
The Rise and Fall of the Army of Northern Virginia Historians of the U.S. Civil War era do not l...
At the Intersection of Military Policy and Politics The purpose of David Alan Johnson’s book, Decide...
River Sentinels Fall of Confederate strongholds recounted On Sunday, February 16, 1862, jubilant F...
The purpose of the paper The Battle of Atlanta was to examine the campaigns between the Union Army...
Analyzing Sherman’s March In Sherman’s March in Myth and Memory, Edward Caudill and Paul Ashdown...
During the first week of July, 1864, the powerful “Army Group” commanded by Major General William T....
Foreshadowing the Fall: A Prelude On July 20, 1864, Union and Confederate forces clashed on the nort...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...
“It hastened what we all fought for, the end of the war: General Sherman’s campaigns through Atlanta...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
Looking at John Bell Hood in a New Light John Bell Hood holds an eminent position among the American...
In the popular imagination, the image of Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant amicably discussing surr...
In Atlanta 1864, Richard McMurry ably retraces the familiar scholarly analysis of Confederate comman...
Confederate army had long odds Could Hood\u27s gamble have paid off? Nashville: The Western Confe...
Reviewer Thomas F. Army writes that in The Siege of Vicksburg: Climax of the Campaign to Open the Mi...
The Rise and Fall of the Army of Northern Virginia Historians of the U.S. Civil War era do not l...
At the Intersection of Military Policy and Politics The purpose of David Alan Johnson’s book, Decide...
River Sentinels Fall of Confederate strongholds recounted On Sunday, February 16, 1862, jubilant F...
The purpose of the paper The Battle of Atlanta was to examine the campaigns between the Union Army...
Analyzing Sherman’s March In Sherman’s March in Myth and Memory, Edward Caudill and Paul Ashdown...
During the first week of July, 1864, the powerful “Army Group” commanded by Major General William T....