The Florida units fighting the Confederate cause in the West made no major contribution to the overall war effort, yet many Florida officers and men did yeomen service in the South’s Army of Tennessee. The experiences of these soldiers certainly reflect those of many other Confederate fighting men in the same army. In this sense, the trials and tribulations of these Floridians may be used to illustrate the changing conditions among at least one segment of the southern troops on a very important front of the Civil War
Three days before Florida seceded from the Union about 125 state artillerymen marched resolutely on ...
Although critical to American military operations in the Third Seminole War, Fort Myers would have p...
Perhaps the most tenuous claim in this otherwise fine collection of essays on the history and people...
Shining a Light on the Little Known Roll of Floridians During the War The service of Florida’s sons ...
In the voluminous writings on the Civil War the region of the upper South has attracted attention as...
The purpose of this thesis is to chronicle the actions of the soldiers of Florida during the Civil W...
The purpose of this thesis is to chronicle the actions of the soldiers of Florida during the Civil W...
The new Confederate commander at Pensacola seemed omnipresent. In conjunction with Colonel William J...
On April 26, 1865, on a farm just outside Durham, North Carolina, General Joseph E. Johnston surrend...
James William Allen\u27s career as a Confederate soldier lasted only six months; he doubled over wit...
From the Florida Keys to Havana A Confederate journal of service The steady publication of letters...
Secession and the approach of hostilities in 1861 found Florida unprepared for civil war. The state’...
A long neglected area of American Civil War history has been the thousands of unpublished letters an...
Five days subsequent to the great artillery duel of November 22-23 Bragg endeavored to transmit mail...
Secession and civil war filled the air along with the blossoms of spring in Florida and the rest of ...
Three days before Florida seceded from the Union about 125 state artillerymen marched resolutely on ...
Although critical to American military operations in the Third Seminole War, Fort Myers would have p...
Perhaps the most tenuous claim in this otherwise fine collection of essays on the history and people...
Shining a Light on the Little Known Roll of Floridians During the War The service of Florida’s sons ...
In the voluminous writings on the Civil War the region of the upper South has attracted attention as...
The purpose of this thesis is to chronicle the actions of the soldiers of Florida during the Civil W...
The purpose of this thesis is to chronicle the actions of the soldiers of Florida during the Civil W...
The new Confederate commander at Pensacola seemed omnipresent. In conjunction with Colonel William J...
On April 26, 1865, on a farm just outside Durham, North Carolina, General Joseph E. Johnston surrend...
James William Allen\u27s career as a Confederate soldier lasted only six months; he doubled over wit...
From the Florida Keys to Havana A Confederate journal of service The steady publication of letters...
Secession and the approach of hostilities in 1861 found Florida unprepared for civil war. The state’...
A long neglected area of American Civil War history has been the thousands of unpublished letters an...
Five days subsequent to the great artillery duel of November 22-23 Bragg endeavored to transmit mail...
Secession and civil war filled the air along with the blossoms of spring in Florida and the rest of ...
Three days before Florida seceded from the Union about 125 state artillerymen marched resolutely on ...
Although critical to American military operations in the Third Seminole War, Fort Myers would have p...
Perhaps the most tenuous claim in this otherwise fine collection of essays on the history and people...