A New Study of Wartime Washington Walt Whitman, one of the thousands of new residents drawn to Washington during the Civil War, famously lamented in Specimen Days (1882) that the “mushy influences of current times would prevent “the real war from getting “in the books. Taking a ...
The superb essays in Lincoln and His Contemporaries were developed from the Centennial Lincoln Sympo...
The War Worth Fighting edited by Stephen D. Engle Publisher: University Press of Florida Retail Pric...
Selling Emancipation Lincoln Returns to his Moral Center Like most presidents, Abraham Lincoln fac...
Statesman and poet Civil War visionaries of politics and thought Nineteenth-century visitors to Wa...
Approximately 65,000 books have been published on the Civil War plus another 16,000 on Abraham Linco...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
Lincoln\u27s Impetuosity It was in early July 1864 that Ulysses S. Grant had stolen a march on Rober...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
Combining Political and Military History As president, Abraham Lincoln had to navigate the treachero...
Fresh Introspective into the First Days of the War John and Charles Lockwood present a meticulous tr...
Recreating Washington A new capital for a reunited nation Its location was the result of compromis...
The other West Wing: Lincoln and his ranch Thematic studies on President Abraham Lincoln are le...
Pity Abraham Lincoln. Everything that should have gone right for the Union cause in the spring of 18...
Lincoln and the Military by John F. Marszalek Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press Retail P...
Washington, D.C., was the most heavily fortified city in North America at the close of the Civil War...
The superb essays in Lincoln and His Contemporaries were developed from the Centennial Lincoln Sympo...
The War Worth Fighting edited by Stephen D. Engle Publisher: University Press of Florida Retail Pric...
Selling Emancipation Lincoln Returns to his Moral Center Like most presidents, Abraham Lincoln fac...
Statesman and poet Civil War visionaries of politics and thought Nineteenth-century visitors to Wa...
Approximately 65,000 books have been published on the Civil War plus another 16,000 on Abraham Linco...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
Lincoln\u27s Impetuosity It was in early July 1864 that Ulysses S. Grant had stolen a march on Rober...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
Combining Political and Military History As president, Abraham Lincoln had to navigate the treachero...
Fresh Introspective into the First Days of the War John and Charles Lockwood present a meticulous tr...
Recreating Washington A new capital for a reunited nation Its location was the result of compromis...
The other West Wing: Lincoln and his ranch Thematic studies on President Abraham Lincoln are le...
Pity Abraham Lincoln. Everything that should have gone right for the Union cause in the spring of 18...
Lincoln and the Military by John F. Marszalek Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press Retail P...
Washington, D.C., was the most heavily fortified city in North America at the close of the Civil War...
The superb essays in Lincoln and His Contemporaries were developed from the Centennial Lincoln Sympo...
The War Worth Fighting edited by Stephen D. Engle Publisher: University Press of Florida Retail Pric...
Selling Emancipation Lincoln Returns to his Moral Center Like most presidents, Abraham Lincoln fac...