An Important New Look at the Ohio River Country In the first installment of his magisterial The Road to Disunion, William Freehling reminded his readers that “change was omnipresent, varieties abounded, [and] visions multiplied in the antebellum North and South.1 Writt...
Review of: "On Jordan\u27s Banks: Emancipation and Its Aftermath in the Ohio River Valley," by Darre...
It\u27s often taken as a simple truth that the Civil War and the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constit...
Review of: Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps, by Amy Murrell T...
Slavery on the Borderlands Slavery has been called the original sin in American history, and there h...
Dividing the West The American West once flanked both sides of the Ohio River and the upper Mississi...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...
In the decades before the Civil War, St. Louis sat on a border between slave and free states. Jesse ...
Michael D. Robinson is currently an assistant professor at the University of Mobile. This is his fir...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
Conflicted Loyalties and Postwar Identities in the Border South This important book explores the Civ...
Slavery in the North American Borderlands The editors of Linking the Histories of Slavery state that...
Religious Difference and the Making of Unionism before the Civil War In Bonds of Union: Religion, Ra...
Exploring Labor along the Mason-Dixon Line Max Grivno, assistant professor of history at the Univers...
A Tale of Two Towns This study of the Civil War in Corydon, Indiana, and Frankfort, Kentucky, origin...
Repositioning the Cause of the Civil War According to Stanley Harrold’s important new book, Border W...
Review of: "On Jordan\u27s Banks: Emancipation and Its Aftermath in the Ohio River Valley," by Darre...
It\u27s often taken as a simple truth that the Civil War and the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constit...
Review of: Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps, by Amy Murrell T...
Slavery on the Borderlands Slavery has been called the original sin in American history, and there h...
Dividing the West The American West once flanked both sides of the Ohio River and the upper Mississi...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...
In the decades before the Civil War, St. Louis sat on a border between slave and free states. Jesse ...
Michael D. Robinson is currently an assistant professor at the University of Mobile. This is his fir...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
Conflicted Loyalties and Postwar Identities in the Border South This important book explores the Civ...
Slavery in the North American Borderlands The editors of Linking the Histories of Slavery state that...
Religious Difference and the Making of Unionism before the Civil War In Bonds of Union: Religion, Ra...
Exploring Labor along the Mason-Dixon Line Max Grivno, assistant professor of history at the Univers...
A Tale of Two Towns This study of the Civil War in Corydon, Indiana, and Frankfort, Kentucky, origin...
Repositioning the Cause of the Civil War According to Stanley Harrold’s important new book, Border W...
Review of: "On Jordan\u27s Banks: Emancipation and Its Aftermath in the Ohio River Valley," by Darre...
It\u27s often taken as a simple truth that the Civil War and the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constit...
Review of: Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps, by Amy Murrell T...