Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Following the end of the American Civil War in 1865, thousands of Union veterans joined the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), the largest Union veterans' fraternal organization in the United States. Upwards of 25,000 Hoosier veterans were members in the Department of Indiana by 1890, including President Benjamin Harrison and General Lew Wallace. This thesis argues that Indiana GAR members met in fraternity to share and construct memories of the Civil War that helped make sense of the past and the present. Indiana GAR members took it upon themselves after the war to act as gatekeepers of Civil War memory in the Hoosier state, publicly arguing that important values they acquired through...
On November 21, a small contingent from the 26th PEMR or PCG—Gettysburg College’s reenacting group—g...
The Midwest home front is one of the overlooked frontiers in American Civil War scholarship. Histori...
This thesis uses the narrative of Charles Sumner\u27s Caning to examine the shift in national public...
America’s Civil War transformed the political, economic and social landscape of the nation. Nowhere ...
Following the bloody years of the Civil War, veteran organizations became a breeding ground for nati...
Borne of the Civil War, one fraternal organization quickly assumed such great authority that it re-s...
In July 1861, 101 farm boys and shopkeepers left northern Indiana to do their part to save the Union...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)After governing Indiana during the Civil Wa...
Historians have considered some aspects of the impact of the war on higher education, but their work...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)When the United States entered World War I ...
Marching in the Gettysburg Liberty Parade in May 1918 was a drum corps consisting entirely of Civil ...
Master of ArtsDepartment of HistoryCharles W. Sanders, Jr.This thesis examines the reasons Union sol...
For many United States Colored Troops, remembering the Civil War and their comrades who fell in it b...
The American Civil War is one of the most studied periods in American history, with over 60,000 book...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
On November 21, a small contingent from the 26th PEMR or PCG—Gettysburg College’s reenacting group—g...
The Midwest home front is one of the overlooked frontiers in American Civil War scholarship. Histori...
This thesis uses the narrative of Charles Sumner\u27s Caning to examine the shift in national public...
America’s Civil War transformed the political, economic and social landscape of the nation. Nowhere ...
Following the bloody years of the Civil War, veteran organizations became a breeding ground for nati...
Borne of the Civil War, one fraternal organization quickly assumed such great authority that it re-s...
In July 1861, 101 farm boys and shopkeepers left northern Indiana to do their part to save the Union...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)After governing Indiana during the Civil Wa...
Historians have considered some aspects of the impact of the war on higher education, but their work...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)When the United States entered World War I ...
Marching in the Gettysburg Liberty Parade in May 1918 was a drum corps consisting entirely of Civil ...
Master of ArtsDepartment of HistoryCharles W. Sanders, Jr.This thesis examines the reasons Union sol...
For many United States Colored Troops, remembering the Civil War and their comrades who fell in it b...
The American Civil War is one of the most studied periods in American history, with over 60,000 book...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
On November 21, a small contingent from the 26th PEMR or PCG—Gettysburg College’s reenacting group—g...
The Midwest home front is one of the overlooked frontiers in American Civil War scholarship. Histori...
This thesis uses the narrative of Charles Sumner\u27s Caning to examine the shift in national public...