In June 1860, as the United States advanced toward the secession crisis, headmaster Samuel Pasco watched his Waukeenah Academy students exhibit the knowledge they had acquired over the past term to a crowd of proud parents and friends. During the program, the boys demonstrated their proficiency in subjects such as geography, spelling and reading, chemistry, grammar, arithmetic, and translation of Latin.1 Following the formal examinations, the students acted and sang various orations and songs for their guests
Perhaps the most tenuous claim in this otherwise fine collection of essays on the history and people...
As the Civil War closed and Reconstruction began, a small army of teachers arrived in Florida. Under...
As the Civil War closed and Reconstruction began, a small army of teachers arrived in Florida. Under...
Mississippi in the Confederacy, As They Saw It. Edited by John K. Bettersworth. (Baton Rouge, Louisi...
The summer of 1863 was a portentous time for the Confederate States of America. In May, Union Genera...
The summer of 1863 was a cruel season for the 4,500 starving, beleaguered citizens of Vicksburg, Mis...
Shining a Light on the Little Known Roll of Floridians During the War The service of Florida’s sons ...
As was true of most of the institutions of higher learning taken over by the State at one time or an...
In the early months of 1861, some Florida citizens seemed to feel that the approaching conflict woul...
Confederate Florida, far removed from the clash of massed armies to its north, remained in many resp...
Sacrifice at the Margins of the Confederacy: Florida and the Civil War Of the tens of thousands of b...
Secession and the approach of hostilities in 1861 found Florida unprepared for civil war. The state’...
As Florida\u27s political leaders voted on January 10, 1861, to follow the secessionist lead of Sout...
The Florida units fighting the Confederate cause in the West made no major contribution to the overa...
The year 1860 was one of political unrest and agitation in Florida. Most Southerners argued with an ...
Perhaps the most tenuous claim in this otherwise fine collection of essays on the history and people...
As the Civil War closed and Reconstruction began, a small army of teachers arrived in Florida. Under...
As the Civil War closed and Reconstruction began, a small army of teachers arrived in Florida. Under...
Mississippi in the Confederacy, As They Saw It. Edited by John K. Bettersworth. (Baton Rouge, Louisi...
The summer of 1863 was a portentous time for the Confederate States of America. In May, Union Genera...
The summer of 1863 was a cruel season for the 4,500 starving, beleaguered citizens of Vicksburg, Mis...
Shining a Light on the Little Known Roll of Floridians During the War The service of Florida’s sons ...
As was true of most of the institutions of higher learning taken over by the State at one time or an...
In the early months of 1861, some Florida citizens seemed to feel that the approaching conflict woul...
Confederate Florida, far removed from the clash of massed armies to its north, remained in many resp...
Sacrifice at the Margins of the Confederacy: Florida and the Civil War Of the tens of thousands of b...
Secession and the approach of hostilities in 1861 found Florida unprepared for civil war. The state’...
As Florida\u27s political leaders voted on January 10, 1861, to follow the secessionist lead of Sout...
The Florida units fighting the Confederate cause in the West made no major contribution to the overa...
The year 1860 was one of political unrest and agitation in Florida. Most Southerners argued with an ...
Perhaps the most tenuous claim in this otherwise fine collection of essays on the history and people...
As the Civil War closed and Reconstruction began, a small army of teachers arrived in Florida. Under...
As the Civil War closed and Reconstruction began, a small army of teachers arrived in Florida. Under...