A New Approach to the Mexican-American War Amy S. Greenberg’s A Wicked War provides an unusual synthesis of the U.S. - Mexican War by interweaving five biographies, with some “six degrees of separation interconnections among them, through a narrative, beginning with the U.S. ann...
The Mexican War, 1846-1848, has often been overlooked in American history. Scholars have been more i...
On May 13, 1846, the United States of America declared war on the United Mexican States. In response...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
David W. Levy Prize finalist, Fall 2017The Mexican-American War significantly expanded the territori...
Manifest Destiny in Retrospect In this sympathetic yet not uncritical biography, Robert W. Merry...
Looking at the Pre-Civil War Proving Ground Readers have benefited from several recent treatment...
The outbreak of the Mexican War during President James K. Polk's administration led immediately to a...
I don\u27t believe any writer could create a fictional war better than the truth of the Civil War. T...
The Mexican War, which resulted in a vast expansion of the national domain, has had a small place in...
In 1844, Whig, former President, and then-Representative John Quincy Adams reflected on President Jo...
Migration to Mexico Ex-Confederates moved from one Civil War to another Most Civil War readers a...
Review of: Blood over Texas: The Truth about Mexico\u27s War with the United States. Montaigne, Sanf...
A New Look at a Different Kind of War An old truism warns historians that their books often refl...
The Proving Ground for Civil War Leaders Historians have wondered what effect the Mexican War may h...
The unknown author of this 1846 publication asks the question: “Would the invasion and conquest of M...
The Mexican War, 1846-1848, has often been overlooked in American history. Scholars have been more i...
On May 13, 1846, the United States of America declared war on the United Mexican States. In response...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
David W. Levy Prize finalist, Fall 2017The Mexican-American War significantly expanded the territori...
Manifest Destiny in Retrospect In this sympathetic yet not uncritical biography, Robert W. Merry...
Looking at the Pre-Civil War Proving Ground Readers have benefited from several recent treatment...
The outbreak of the Mexican War during President James K. Polk's administration led immediately to a...
I don\u27t believe any writer could create a fictional war better than the truth of the Civil War. T...
The Mexican War, which resulted in a vast expansion of the national domain, has had a small place in...
In 1844, Whig, former President, and then-Representative John Quincy Adams reflected on President Jo...
Migration to Mexico Ex-Confederates moved from one Civil War to another Most Civil War readers a...
Review of: Blood over Texas: The Truth about Mexico\u27s War with the United States. Montaigne, Sanf...
A New Look at a Different Kind of War An old truism warns historians that their books often refl...
The Proving Ground for Civil War Leaders Historians have wondered what effect the Mexican War may h...
The unknown author of this 1846 publication asks the question: “Would the invasion and conquest of M...
The Mexican War, 1846-1848, has often been overlooked in American history. Scholars have been more i...
On May 13, 1846, the United States of America declared war on the United Mexican States. In response...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...