Union officers in the Civil War’s Western Theater were uninterested in waging a purely moral crusade to free slaves. Instead, they executed pro-emancipation policy as a practical measure after recognizing it would help win the war. So argues Kristopher Teters in this powerful volume focusing on the role Union forces played in the complicated process of emancipation
Agency and Survival over Slavery and Oppression This is an important, inspiring, and at times a rath...
From July to October 1865, Union Major General Carl Schurz toured the South from Charleston to New O...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...
This project provides a new history of the implementation of federal emancipation policy by the Unio...
A Contrarian Look at Union Soldiers in the Election of 1864 Although Jonathan White completed his di...
Interview with Chandra Manning Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CWBR): ...
How the Creation and Implementation of the US Colored Troops Worked This book is the third in John H...
This project provides a new history of the implementation of federal emancipation policy by the Unio...
Desperate Measures The Southern Plans of Emancipation Sparked by a proposal by Major General Patr...
Review of: Soldiering for Freedom: How the Union Army Recruited, Trained, and Deployed the U.S. Colo...
Unionism in the Slave States in Wartime Two key facts about wartime Southern Unionism stand out. Fir...
A Look at Race and the Union Army in the American West Nearly 150 years later, the Civil War con...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
Fighting for Survival and Freedom in the West Ian Michael Spurgeon\u27s Soldiers in the Army of Free...
State of the Field: Where are Union Soldiers Now, and Where in the World Should they Go Next? “Who w...
Agency and Survival over Slavery and Oppression This is an important, inspiring, and at times a rath...
From July to October 1865, Union Major General Carl Schurz toured the South from Charleston to New O...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...
This project provides a new history of the implementation of federal emancipation policy by the Unio...
A Contrarian Look at Union Soldiers in the Election of 1864 Although Jonathan White completed his di...
Interview with Chandra Manning Interviewed by Christopher Childers Civil War Book Review (CWBR): ...
How the Creation and Implementation of the US Colored Troops Worked This book is the third in John H...
This project provides a new history of the implementation of federal emancipation policy by the Unio...
Desperate Measures The Southern Plans of Emancipation Sparked by a proposal by Major General Patr...
Review of: Soldiering for Freedom: How the Union Army Recruited, Trained, and Deployed the U.S. Colo...
Unionism in the Slave States in Wartime Two key facts about wartime Southern Unionism stand out. Fir...
A Look at Race and the Union Army in the American West Nearly 150 years later, the Civil War con...
Were the Union\u27s War Policies Legal and Moral? In this work the author seeks to explain the stra...
Fighting for Survival and Freedom in the West Ian Michael Spurgeon\u27s Soldiers in the Army of Free...
State of the Field: Where are Union Soldiers Now, and Where in the World Should they Go Next? “Who w...
Agency and Survival over Slavery and Oppression This is an important, inspiring, and at times a rath...
From July to October 1865, Union Major General Carl Schurz toured the South from Charleston to New O...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...