Taylor broadens the focus of scholarship on Black Northerners during the war from the most prominent leaders to newspaper editors and other local trailblazers, showing that not all Black Northerners trusted military service would garner citizenship, and in doing so, “Taylor’s Fighting for Citizenship hits its mark.
Exploring Civil War Society Civil War Citizens is a collection of seven essays examining the wartime...
The continued presence of armed, uniformed black militia companies throughout the southern United St...
Confederate Conscription and the Struggle for Southern Soldiers is thoroughly researched and careful...
Between Service and Citizenship The idea of the citizen soldier, particularly members of local milit...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...
This collection of 11 essays on the transformation of citizenship seems especially timely as we face...
How Citizenship was Defined and Defended by African American Boston In More Than Freedom: Fighting f...
The Frederick C. Douglass Papers, held at the Joyner Library of East Carolina University are an impo...
Review of: Soldiering for Freedom: How the Union Army Recruited, Trained, and Deployed the U.S. Colo...
The Frederick C. Douglass Papers, held at the Joyner Library of East Carolina University are an impo...
When a man puts his life at the disposal of the nation, that man has earned the rights of a citizen....
Passing the Military Test Professional historians have produced a steady flow of books about United ...
This article challenges the notion that black militias were of little consequence in the antebellum...
Fighting for Freedom While many excellent books recount the broad story of African American sol...
While most of the fighting took place in the South, the Civil War profoundly affected the North. As ...
Exploring Civil War Society Civil War Citizens is a collection of seven essays examining the wartime...
The continued presence of armed, uniformed black militia companies throughout the southern United St...
Confederate Conscription and the Struggle for Southern Soldiers is thoroughly researched and careful...
Between Service and Citizenship The idea of the citizen soldier, particularly members of local milit...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...
This collection of 11 essays on the transformation of citizenship seems especially timely as we face...
How Citizenship was Defined and Defended by African American Boston In More Than Freedom: Fighting f...
The Frederick C. Douglass Papers, held at the Joyner Library of East Carolina University are an impo...
Review of: Soldiering for Freedom: How the Union Army Recruited, Trained, and Deployed the U.S. Colo...
The Frederick C. Douglass Papers, held at the Joyner Library of East Carolina University are an impo...
When a man puts his life at the disposal of the nation, that man has earned the rights of a citizen....
Passing the Military Test Professional historians have produced a steady flow of books about United ...
This article challenges the notion that black militias were of little consequence in the antebellum...
Fighting for Freedom While many excellent books recount the broad story of African American sol...
While most of the fighting took place in the South, the Civil War profoundly affected the North. As ...
Exploring Civil War Society Civil War Citizens is a collection of seven essays examining the wartime...
The continued presence of armed, uniformed black militia companies throughout the southern United St...
Confederate Conscription and the Struggle for Southern Soldiers is thoroughly researched and careful...