A Review of an Important, but Understudied, Battle In a letter written in early January 1863, less than a week after the Battle of Stones River, Confederate Brigadier General Patton Anderson bitterly told his wife that he doubted that anyone would “ever write a truthful history o...
While the Army of the Potomac and the Army of the Tennessee have each rightly earned their spots in ...
Shedding the Veneer of the Invincible “Stonewall Jackson One of the most polarizing and beloved fig...
The Brutal Reality of War Sinks in at Shiloh Many battles throughout the American Civil War impacted...
Three days of savage and bloody fighting between Confederate and Union troops at Stones River in Mid...
The forgotten army A history of the western juggernaut Throughout the massive and expanding histor...
A fresh look at a lesser known battle As the sesquicentennial celebration of the Civil War continues...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...
A Promising Start to a Refreshing Trilogy on Chickamauga A growing number of historians have lamente...
Judging by the total number of troops involved (no more than 4,000), the casualties for both sides (...
Foreshadowing the Fall: A Prelude On July 20, 1864, Union and Confederate forces clashed on the nort...
A New Study of a Vicious Battle Although the battle of Chickamauga ranks as the second largest battl...
Given the steady market for Civil War battle studies, the lack of a complete treatment of the indivi...
A Close Investigation of One State’s Experience Mark Christ, an established expert on Civil War ...
A Focused Study of the Louisiana Tigers at Gettysburg Scott L. Mingus’s The Louisiana Tigers in...
While the Army of the Potomac and the Army of the Tennessee have each rightly earned their spots in ...
Shedding the Veneer of the Invincible “Stonewall Jackson One of the most polarizing and beloved fig...
The Brutal Reality of War Sinks in at Shiloh Many battles throughout the American Civil War impacted...
Three days of savage and bloody fighting between Confederate and Union troops at Stones River in Mid...
The forgotten army A history of the western juggernaut Throughout the massive and expanding histor...
A fresh look at a lesser known battle As the sesquicentennial celebration of the Civil War continues...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
A Needed New Look at an Important Battle The battle at Kennesaw Mountain in northern Georgia during ...
A Promising Start to a Refreshing Trilogy on Chickamauga A growing number of historians have lamente...
Judging by the total number of troops involved (no more than 4,000), the casualties for both sides (...
Foreshadowing the Fall: A Prelude On July 20, 1864, Union and Confederate forces clashed on the nort...
A New Study of a Vicious Battle Although the battle of Chickamauga ranks as the second largest battl...
Given the steady market for Civil War battle studies, the lack of a complete treatment of the indivi...
A Close Investigation of One State’s Experience Mark Christ, an established expert on Civil War ...
A Focused Study of the Louisiana Tigers at Gettysburg Scott L. Mingus’s The Louisiana Tigers in...
While the Army of the Potomac and the Army of the Tennessee have each rightly earned their spots in ...
Shedding the Veneer of the Invincible “Stonewall Jackson One of the most polarizing and beloved fig...
The Brutal Reality of War Sinks in at Shiloh Many battles throughout the American Civil War impacted...