American Civil War
16,005 Followers
Recent papers in American Civil War
Music stands out as a crucial tool that was utilized in the course of the Civil Rights Movement. Activists and musicians united to write music that reflected events of the time. African American folk, gospel, and spiritual music was... more
LEGISLATIVE RESOLUTION honoring Colonel Thomas J. Kelly posthumously upon the occasion of his designation as recipient of a Liberty Medal, the highest honor bestowed upon an individual by the New York State Senate. WHEREAS, It is... more
A BYU course paper where I examine how some more isolated areas of the would-be Confederacy fared better than the South as a whole during the economic plummet that devastated the region in the aftermath of the Civil War and years of... more
A commemoration to Colonel Thomas J. KELLY & the Manchester Martyrs. Originally produced for the Sesquicentennial procession and program, Sunday, April 23, 2017, 3:00PM at Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, NY.
I tried to put US and associated world history into 150 pages. I try to focus on the US history that I assume may be unknown or not taught in a big way in our schools or broadcast on TV or is being censored. I have been adding to this... more
Former self-styled Confederate embassy in Washington, D.C.
Lecture to Jackson Purchase Historical Society , February 2011. Published in the Journal of the Jackson Purchase Historical Society, Vol. 41 (2014): 106-124.
Confederate monuments figure prominently as epicenters of social conflict. These stone and metal constructs resonate with the tensions of modern America, giving concrete definition to the ideologies that divide us. Confederate monuments... more
“The End of Innocence: The Effects of the Civil War on Children in the Paintings of Eastman Johnson” War, Literature, and the Arts, vol. 26, (2014) n.p.
Collection of new research on the Reconstruction South, co-edited with Bruce E. Baker, with a foreword by Eric Foner
The progression in vernacular architecture which took place in the south following the conclusion of the Civil War varied extensively depending upon the industry in which the property holder made their living. This historic time of... more
College Art Association, Chicago, Illinois, February 12-15, 2014
All the regular units raised in Chattanooga and Hamilton County by both the Union and the Confederate armies during the War of the Rebellion.
From "A Questionnaire on Monuments"
Laboulaye, “le plus Américain de tous les Francais” , n’avait jamais visité les États-Unis, bien qu’il ait reçu beaucoup d’invitations officielles pour s’y rendre. En dépit de cette lacune, il était devenu à partir des années 1860s, sous... more
The difficulty of the lives Civil War and Western cavalrymen faced, including selected soldiers who settled the Arroyo Grande Valley in California.
When the United States emerged as a world power in the years before the Civil War, the men who presided over the nation’s triumphant territorial and economic expansion were largely southern slaveholders. As presidents, cabinet officers,... more
Powerpoint of presentation at Dingle Historical Society, 16th July 2015
Whatever Jefferson Davis’s reputation as a slave-holder and proponent of states’ rights, McPherson has done a service in resurrecting Davis’s reputation as commander-in-chief from overly critical historians, even if McPherson himself... more
Journal article based on my thesis A Slow Burn.
Profiles Peter Gray Meek, the editor of Bellefonte, Pennsylvania's newspaper the Democratic Watchman during the Civil War. Meek stood out as an anti-war Democrat, or "Copperhead," in the Republican lion's den that was Bellefonte during... more