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Civil War Book Review is the journal of record for new and newly reprinted books about the Antebellum, Civil War, and Reconstruction eras. Current Issue: Summer 2024 Editorial
- Civil War Book Review - repository.lsu.edu
This book boasts 50 full-color maps that show the...
- Civil War Book Review - repository.lsu.edu
This book boasts 50 full-color maps that show the progression of the war in all its facets including battles and skirmishes, and infantry, cavalry, and naval movements.
Over 150 years after the end of the Civil War, unit histories remain in production as a compelling way to understand individual and shared experiences, and to comprehend how competing societies raised, equipped, maintained, supported, and remembered their experiences
During the war, Federal-occupied New Orleans was a hotbed of political jobbery, graft, military corruption, and illegal trading, especially in illegitimate commodities such as raw cotton from behind the Confederate lines.
elucidate the ways in which Christianity helped shape Civil-War era Americans’ attitudes toward the institution of slavery, the war over its expansion, the society the war rent apart, and the society Americans built after Appomattox. Americans are wont to believe children’s incorporation into the consumer culture is a recent development.
Civil War Book Review Winter 2021 Article 6 War and Peace on the Rio Grande Frontier, 1830-1880 Todd W. Wahlstrom Pepperdine University, todd.wahlstrom@pepperdine.edu Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr Recommended Citation Wahlstrom, Todd W. (2021) "War and Peace on the Rio Grande Frontier, 1830-1880 ...
Civil War Book Review. Winter 2017. Article 11. The Rivers Ran Backward: The Civil War And The Remaking Of The American Middle Border. Dan Crofts. Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr. Recommended Citation.