On June 22, 1877, William Charity explained his neighborhood’s Civil War loyalties to special commissioner Isaac Baldwin of the Southern Claims Commission (SCC): “The colored people were mostly all for the union.” Charity, a free black Virginian, recognized that “mostly” did not mean all. He went on to suggest: “some of them were blind.” As a self-identified Unionist, Charity had difficulty envisioning a black man who was not loyal to the Union cause and emancipation during the Civil War. Current debates, however, have seized on those black Virginians Charity called “blind,” taking the “mostly” Unionist majority for granted. Like Charity, these black Virginians were loyal to the Union and emancipation, actively resisting the Confederacy and...
One Community’s Complex Experience with Civil War Many Civil War historians today are focusing o...
Between the years 2015 and 2020, over 300 Confederate symbols, including over 140 monuments, were re...
Jonathan Daniel Wells’ Blind No More: African American Resistance, Free-Soil Politics, and the Comin...
On June 22, 1877, William Charity explained his neighborhood’s Civil War loyalties to special commis...
Between 1850 and 1900, Americans redefined their interpretation of national identity and loyalty. In...
Before the final shot of the Civil War rang out, the phrase a rich man\u27s war, poor man\u27s figh...
This thesis aims to recast the story of how white Southern identity and political culture evolved du...
During the American Civil War, Maryland did not join the Confederacy but nonetheless possessed divid...
The transition from slavery to freedom after the Civil War was a drawn out struggle to define how Af...
The thesis investigates the nature of the relationship between white unionists during the American C...
This thesis examines Kentucky’s military recruitment records, relative to the similarly populated ...
Unionism in the Slave States in Wartime Two key facts about wartime Southern Unionism stand out. Fir...
Although the American Civil War is often thought of as a sectional contest, southerners not only fou...
African-Americans in postbellum Norfolk, Virginia, as elsewhere, knew that merely gaining freedom th...
“Clayton Butler has breathed life into a phenomenon”—a “’tiny minority’” of white Unionists who foug...
One Community’s Complex Experience with Civil War Many Civil War historians today are focusing o...
Between the years 2015 and 2020, over 300 Confederate symbols, including over 140 monuments, were re...
Jonathan Daniel Wells’ Blind No More: African American Resistance, Free-Soil Politics, and the Comin...
On June 22, 1877, William Charity explained his neighborhood’s Civil War loyalties to special commis...
Between 1850 and 1900, Americans redefined their interpretation of national identity and loyalty. In...
Before the final shot of the Civil War rang out, the phrase a rich man\u27s war, poor man\u27s figh...
This thesis aims to recast the story of how white Southern identity and political culture evolved du...
During the American Civil War, Maryland did not join the Confederacy but nonetheless possessed divid...
The transition from slavery to freedom after the Civil War was a drawn out struggle to define how Af...
The thesis investigates the nature of the relationship between white unionists during the American C...
This thesis examines Kentucky’s military recruitment records, relative to the similarly populated ...
Unionism in the Slave States in Wartime Two key facts about wartime Southern Unionism stand out. Fir...
Although the American Civil War is often thought of as a sectional contest, southerners not only fou...
African-Americans in postbellum Norfolk, Virginia, as elsewhere, knew that merely gaining freedom th...
“Clayton Butler has breathed life into a phenomenon”—a “’tiny minority’” of white Unionists who foug...
One Community’s Complex Experience with Civil War Many Civil War historians today are focusing o...
Between the years 2015 and 2020, over 300 Confederate symbols, including over 140 monuments, were re...
Jonathan Daniel Wells’ Blind No More: African American Resistance, Free-Soil Politics, and the Comin...