A consise history of the events that led to the Confederate surrender at Tiptonville which concluded the Island No. 10 Campaign in March and April of 1862
the Suffolk Campaign: A Case Study, covers the Civil War that began on April 11, 1863 and ended on ...
Water power: The campaign to control the Mississippi On July 9, 1863, Port Hudson, the last Confe...
Carte de visite of General John Pope, who served in the Union Army during the Civil War. Pope, a na...
As a border state, Kentucky occupied a unique position in the early days of the Civil War. Her neutr...
The Confederate surrender at Vicksburg on the 4th July 1863 was a disaster for the South during the ...
In 1861 the Civil War began and brought with it four years of devastation and destruction along with...
In May and June of 1863, General Ulysses S. Grant's armies converged on Vicksburg, besieging the cit...
President Lincoln proclaimed the blockade of all Confederate ports on April 19, 1861. In order to ma...
Last Chance for a Confederate Missouri: Sterling Price’s 1864 Campaign In the summer and fall of 186...
Flood Tide: A Decisive Moment Philip Leigh\u27s book, The Confederacy at Flood Tide, begins with the...
Purpose From 1861 until 1865 the South staged a dramatic struggle for its independence. The military...
General Nathaniel P. Banks assumed command of the Department of the Gulf for the United States on No...
This book is about the 1861 Shenandoah Valley campaign. It includes a map of Shenandoah Valley in 18...
The series of events that led to the creation of Camp Beauregard was initiated on September 3, 1861,...
Navigating the Mississippi River Campaign A recent documentary on the Civil War noted that the first...
the Suffolk Campaign: A Case Study, covers the Civil War that began on April 11, 1863 and ended on ...
Water power: The campaign to control the Mississippi On July 9, 1863, Port Hudson, the last Confe...
Carte de visite of General John Pope, who served in the Union Army during the Civil War. Pope, a na...
As a border state, Kentucky occupied a unique position in the early days of the Civil War. Her neutr...
The Confederate surrender at Vicksburg on the 4th July 1863 was a disaster for the South during the ...
In 1861 the Civil War began and brought with it four years of devastation and destruction along with...
In May and June of 1863, General Ulysses S. Grant's armies converged on Vicksburg, besieging the cit...
President Lincoln proclaimed the blockade of all Confederate ports on April 19, 1861. In order to ma...
Last Chance for a Confederate Missouri: Sterling Price’s 1864 Campaign In the summer and fall of 186...
Flood Tide: A Decisive Moment Philip Leigh\u27s book, The Confederacy at Flood Tide, begins with the...
Purpose From 1861 until 1865 the South staged a dramatic struggle for its independence. The military...
General Nathaniel P. Banks assumed command of the Department of the Gulf for the United States on No...
This book is about the 1861 Shenandoah Valley campaign. It includes a map of Shenandoah Valley in 18...
The series of events that led to the creation of Camp Beauregard was initiated on September 3, 1861,...
Navigating the Mississippi River Campaign A recent documentary on the Civil War noted that the first...
the Suffolk Campaign: A Case Study, covers the Civil War that began on April 11, 1863 and ended on ...
Water power: The campaign to control the Mississippi On July 9, 1863, Port Hudson, the last Confe...
Carte de visite of General John Pope, who served in the Union Army during the Civil War. Pope, a na...