Spying on the South juxtaposes two intervals when the United States appeared to have fractured into hostile tribes. Writer and journalist Tony Horwitz set out to probe today’s “American divide” with a template in mind—the effort by Frederick Law Olmsted to comprehend North-South antagonisms during the 1850s. Just as Olmsted once had done, Horwitz decided to head South
"Unsettling the South" is a history of the first half-century of US expansion in the southern interi...
Even as the Civil War still raged, interested observers knew that religion had brought on and sustai...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...
In 1866, Harper\u27s Weekly announced a new series of woodcuts of Southern life with the remark, [t...
This paper takes as its subject Frederick Law Olmsted\u27s experiences as a northern journalist trav...
The top weekly publication in the nineteenth-century United States, Harper’s Weekly, faced a new cha...
Review of: Surveillance and Spies in the Civil War: Exposing Confederate Conspiracies in America’s H...
Prospects for Peace in a War-torn Country What duty does a victorious nation have to help rebuild a...
Frederick Law Olmsted is widely admired by historians of the nineteenthcentury United States and gen...
Dividing the West The American West once flanked both sides of the Ohio River and the upper Mississi...
Review of: "Across the Divide: Union Soldiers View the Northern Home Front, by Steven J. Ramol
Henceforth please disregard those glossy New Yorker ads touting Atlanta's cosmopolitanism, Nashville...
Between the years 1865 and 1880, more travelers than in any period outside the Civil War streamed t...
Frederick Law Olmsted’s account of his journeys through the southern states, undertaken from 1852-57...
Telling the Complex Story of Unionism As the Union army surged into Tennessee in the late winter...
"Unsettling the South" is a history of the first half-century of US expansion in the southern interi...
Even as the Civil War still raged, interested observers knew that religion had brought on and sustai...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...
In 1866, Harper\u27s Weekly announced a new series of woodcuts of Southern life with the remark, [t...
This paper takes as its subject Frederick Law Olmsted\u27s experiences as a northern journalist trav...
The top weekly publication in the nineteenth-century United States, Harper’s Weekly, faced a new cha...
Review of: Surveillance and Spies in the Civil War: Exposing Confederate Conspiracies in America’s H...
Prospects for Peace in a War-torn Country What duty does a victorious nation have to help rebuild a...
Frederick Law Olmsted is widely admired by historians of the nineteenthcentury United States and gen...
Dividing the West The American West once flanked both sides of the Ohio River and the upper Mississi...
Review of: "Across the Divide: Union Soldiers View the Northern Home Front, by Steven J. Ramol
Henceforth please disregard those glossy New Yorker ads touting Atlanta's cosmopolitanism, Nashville...
Between the years 1865 and 1880, more travelers than in any period outside the Civil War streamed t...
Frederick Law Olmsted’s account of his journeys through the southern states, undertaken from 1852-57...
Telling the Complex Story of Unionism As the Union army surged into Tennessee in the late winter...
"Unsettling the South" is a history of the first half-century of US expansion in the southern interi...
Even as the Civil War still raged, interested observers knew that religion had brought on and sustai...
A New Look at a Complex Region Look at studies of the northern states during the Civil War. Seldom w...