HISTORY -- United States -- Civil War Period (1850-1877)
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HISTORY -- United States -- Civil War Period (1850-1877)
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HISTORY
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bisacsh
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of22
- History teaches us to hope, reflections on the Civil War and southern history, Charles P. Roland ; edited and with an introduction by John David Smith
- My old Confederate home, a respectable place for Civil War veterans, Rusty Williams
- A just and generous nation, Abraham Lincoln and the fight for American opportunity, Harold Holzer and Norton Garfinkle
- Contested borderland, the Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and Virginia, Brian D. McKnight
- Novelists on the American Civil War, edited by George Parker Anderson
- Gray ghost, the life of Col. John Singleton Mosby, James A. Ramage
- After Lincoln, how the North won the Civil War and lost the peace, A.J. Langguth
- Lincoln on trial, southern civilians and the law of war, Burrus M. Carnahan
- Lincoln of Kentucky, Lowell H. Harrison
- Brigadier General John D. Imboden, Confederate commander in the Shenandoah, Spencer C. Tucker
- Lincoln legends, myths, hoaxes, and confabulations associated with our greatest president, Edward Steers Jr. ; with an introduction by Harold Holzer
- Villainous compounds, chemical weapons & the American Civil War, Guy R. Hasegawa ; foreword by Bill J. Gurley
- The Civil War and American art, Eleanor Jones Harvey
- Abraham Lincoln, Esq., the legal career of America's greatest president, edited by Roger Billings and Frank J. Williams
- Virginia at war, 1863, edited by William C. Davis and James I. Robertson Jr. for the Virginia Center for Civil War Studies
- Race, war, and remembrance in the Appalachian South, John C. Inscoe
- Bluejackets and contrabands, African Americans and the Union Navy, Barbara Brooks Tomblin
- Writing the Gettysburg Address, Martin P. Johnson
- Take sides with the truth, the postwar letters of John Singleton Mosby to Samuel F. Chapman, edited by Peter A. Brown
- The rest I will kill, William Tillman and the unforgettable story of how a free black man refused to become a slave, Brian McGinty
- Perryville, this grand havoc of battle, Kenneth W. Noe
- Colonization after emancipation, Lincoln and the movement for Black resettlement, Phillip W. Magness and Sebastian N. Page