In the days prior to the firing on Fort Sumter, readers of the Charleston Daily Courier were kept well informed on current events by its various correspondents. No paper in the South was better supplied with journalists, who sent in weekly, and often daily, reports from centers of interest. One of these reporters styled himself “Batchelor,” and he made a tour of Florida for the Courier
The Confederate Baggage and Treasure Train Ends Its Flight in Florida: A Diary of Tench Francis Tilg...
It was mid-winter 1835 in Florida and the United States Army was gathering its strength at Fort Dran...
MARTIN TABERT, MARTYR OF AN ERA N. Gordon Carper ROAD FROM RECEIVERSHIP: CLAUDE PEPPER, THE DUPONT T...
In the days prior to the firing on Fort Sumter, readers of the Charleston Daily Courier were kept we...
FLORIDA GUBERNATORIAL POLITICS: THE FULLER WARREN YEARS David R. Colburn and Richard K. Scher THE Ne...
BLOCKADE RUNNERS Alice StricklandTHE CIVIL WAR LETTERS OF AUGUST HENRY MATHERS Franklin A. DotyCIVIL...
From the Florida Keys to Havana A Confederate journal of service The steady publication of letters...
St. Augustine During the Civil War Omega G. East Foreign Travellers in Florida, 1900-1950 Lawrence S...
Noah Brooks, born in Castine, Maine, in 1830, was an experienced newspaper man by the age of twenty-...
In the voluminous writings on the Civil War the region of the upper South has attracted attention as...
CIVIL WAR CAREER OF COLONEL GEORGE WASHINGTON SCOTT Marion B. Lucas A CYCLONE HITS MIAMI: CARRIE NAT...
The news that the Seminoles had begun hostilities in Florida spread slowly early in January, 1836. T...
In the last year of the Civil War, the Union forces took advantage of their seapower to carry the co...
In July of 1861, three months after Confederate gunners opened fire on Fort Sumter igniting the Civi...
Three days before Florida seceded from the Union about 125 state artillerymen marched resolutely on ...
The Confederate Baggage and Treasure Train Ends Its Flight in Florida: A Diary of Tench Francis Tilg...
It was mid-winter 1835 in Florida and the United States Army was gathering its strength at Fort Dran...
MARTIN TABERT, MARTYR OF AN ERA N. Gordon Carper ROAD FROM RECEIVERSHIP: CLAUDE PEPPER, THE DUPONT T...
In the days prior to the firing on Fort Sumter, readers of the Charleston Daily Courier were kept we...
FLORIDA GUBERNATORIAL POLITICS: THE FULLER WARREN YEARS David R. Colburn and Richard K. Scher THE Ne...
BLOCKADE RUNNERS Alice StricklandTHE CIVIL WAR LETTERS OF AUGUST HENRY MATHERS Franklin A. DotyCIVIL...
From the Florida Keys to Havana A Confederate journal of service The steady publication of letters...
St. Augustine During the Civil War Omega G. East Foreign Travellers in Florida, 1900-1950 Lawrence S...
Noah Brooks, born in Castine, Maine, in 1830, was an experienced newspaper man by the age of twenty-...
In the voluminous writings on the Civil War the region of the upper South has attracted attention as...
CIVIL WAR CAREER OF COLONEL GEORGE WASHINGTON SCOTT Marion B. Lucas A CYCLONE HITS MIAMI: CARRIE NAT...
The news that the Seminoles had begun hostilities in Florida spread slowly early in January, 1836. T...
In the last year of the Civil War, the Union forces took advantage of their seapower to carry the co...
In July of 1861, three months after Confederate gunners opened fire on Fort Sumter igniting the Civi...
Three days before Florida seceded from the Union about 125 state artillerymen marched resolutely on ...
The Confederate Baggage and Treasure Train Ends Its Flight in Florida: A Diary of Tench Francis Tilg...
It was mid-winter 1835 in Florida and the United States Army was gathering its strength at Fort Dran...
MARTIN TABERT, MARTYR OF AN ERA N. Gordon Carper ROAD FROM RECEIVERSHIP: CLAUDE PEPPER, THE DUPONT T...