“Too Much for Human Endurance” is the story of George Spangler, his family, and their farm during and after the 3-day Battle of Gettysburg in July 1863. What makes this volume so valuable is that it not only establishes the strategic importance of the property, but introduces the readers to the untold stories of the Spanglers, the soldiers who were brought there wounded and dying, and the medical personnel who labored to save their lives
On Friday, October 12th, 2018, the National Civil War Medicine Museum kicked off its 26th annual con...
The tale of Sergent Frederick Huber is relatively well known. The young man, fighting at the battle ...
Civil War historians have produced no fewer than 6,000 books on the Gettysburg Campaign, saturating ...
Do Unto Others Competing groups offered aid to the dying Throughout history it seems the best in p...
The Battle of Gettysburg has inspired a more voluminous literature than any single event in American...
750,000 and rising. 2.5 percent of the population. Greater than all other American wars combined. No...
From the acclaimed Civil War historian, a brilliant new history—the most intimate and richly readabl...
This semester, I am continuing to work on the Killed at Gettysburg digital history project. This tim...
In 1893, two Philadelphia doctors from the Mütter Museum sent surveys to Civil War amputee veterans ...
This semester, I have been working on the Killed at Gettysburg digital history project, which aims t...
For a regimental history to have an impact on historical literature the author must convey the wider...
Looking back on the practices of Civil War Americans, many people tend to believe the Civil War was ...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
Thirty years after the battle of Gettysburg, the small Pennsylvania town was once again besieged—onl...
The stuffed head of Old Baldy, General George Meade’s favorite horse, can be found mounted on the wa...
On Friday, October 12th, 2018, the National Civil War Medicine Museum kicked off its 26th annual con...
The tale of Sergent Frederick Huber is relatively well known. The young man, fighting at the battle ...
Civil War historians have produced no fewer than 6,000 books on the Gettysburg Campaign, saturating ...
Do Unto Others Competing groups offered aid to the dying Throughout history it seems the best in p...
The Battle of Gettysburg has inspired a more voluminous literature than any single event in American...
750,000 and rising. 2.5 percent of the population. Greater than all other American wars combined. No...
From the acclaimed Civil War historian, a brilliant new history—the most intimate and richly readabl...
This semester, I am continuing to work on the Killed at Gettysburg digital history project. This tim...
In 1893, two Philadelphia doctors from the Mütter Museum sent surveys to Civil War amputee veterans ...
This semester, I have been working on the Killed at Gettysburg digital history project, which aims t...
For a regimental history to have an impact on historical literature the author must convey the wider...
Looking back on the practices of Civil War Americans, many people tend to believe the Civil War was ...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
Thirty years after the battle of Gettysburg, the small Pennsylvania town was once again besieged—onl...
The stuffed head of Old Baldy, General George Meade’s favorite horse, can be found mounted on the wa...
On Friday, October 12th, 2018, the National Civil War Medicine Museum kicked off its 26th annual con...
The tale of Sergent Frederick Huber is relatively well known. The young man, fighting at the battle ...
Civil War historians have produced no fewer than 6,000 books on the Gettysburg Campaign, saturating ...