In the “Acknowledgements” for Vicksburg: Grant’s Campaign That Broke the Confederacy, Donald L. Miller states that when he started doing research for the book in 1997, he went to Vicksburg and started exploring “by car, on foot, and in a rented power boat the broken terrain and serpentine waterways that” General Ulysses S. Grant “had to surmount to take the town.” (503) He did that to gain an awareness that empowered him to produce a history of the campaign that had a “palpable feel for the physical setting in which the characters” interacted, and in which “the story unfolds.” (503) ..
Digging, Not Starving out Vicksburg’s Defenders Many books have been written about the 1863 Vicksbur...
Petersburg and the Strategy of Persistence Author Gordon Rhea has something of a cottage industry go...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
An Essay Collection Providing a New Look at a New Campaign In The Vicksburg Campaign: March 29 – May...
Although much more important than the Battle of Gettysburg in determining the outcome of the Civil W...
General in black and white: Illustrated biography of a Union warrior Nearly forty years have ela...
Water power: The campaign to control the Mississippi On July 9, 1863, Port Hudson, the last Confe...
Vital Vicksburg A study of the complex campaign Vicksburg is fresh, powerful, and authoritative. M...
Reviewer Thomas F. Army writes that in The Siege of Vicksburg: Climax of the Campaign to Open the Mi...
The summer of 1863 was a cruel season for the 4,500 starving, beleaguered citizens of Vicksburg, Mis...
Review of: Vicksburg: The Campaign That Opened the Mississippi. Ballard, Michael B
Analyzing Grant\u27s Command Structure Ulysses S. Grant ranks as the greatest general to emerge ...
David A. Powell’s The Impulse of Victory: Ulysses S. Grant at Chattanooga combines “personality-cent...
Battle\u27s first broad study Confederate loss sealed fate of the campaign and the war in the west ...
The Overland Campaign as a Shift in Warfare In the spring of 1864, after three years of conflict, th...
Digging, Not Starving out Vicksburg’s Defenders Many books have been written about the 1863 Vicksbur...
Petersburg and the Strategy of Persistence Author Gordon Rhea has something of a cottage industry go...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...
An Essay Collection Providing a New Look at a New Campaign In The Vicksburg Campaign: March 29 – May...
Although much more important than the Battle of Gettysburg in determining the outcome of the Civil W...
General in black and white: Illustrated biography of a Union warrior Nearly forty years have ela...
Water power: The campaign to control the Mississippi On July 9, 1863, Port Hudson, the last Confe...
Vital Vicksburg A study of the complex campaign Vicksburg is fresh, powerful, and authoritative. M...
Reviewer Thomas F. Army writes that in The Siege of Vicksburg: Climax of the Campaign to Open the Mi...
The summer of 1863 was a cruel season for the 4,500 starving, beleaguered citizens of Vicksburg, Mis...
Review of: Vicksburg: The Campaign That Opened the Mississippi. Ballard, Michael B
Analyzing Grant\u27s Command Structure Ulysses S. Grant ranks as the greatest general to emerge ...
David A. Powell’s The Impulse of Victory: Ulysses S. Grant at Chattanooga combines “personality-cent...
Battle\u27s first broad study Confederate loss sealed fate of the campaign and the war in the west ...
The Overland Campaign as a Shift in Warfare In the spring of 1864, after three years of conflict, th...
Digging, Not Starving out Vicksburg’s Defenders Many books have been written about the 1863 Vicksbur...
Petersburg and the Strategy of Persistence Author Gordon Rhea has something of a cottage industry go...
A Doomed Dream: The Tennessee Campaign of 1864 Until the late 1960s, Civil War historians and enthus...