Emory M. Thomas. symptomatic of heightened class awareness among ... The most celebrated case of disloyalty to the Confederacy occurred in the piney woods of Jones County , Mississippi . There indigenous Unionist sentiment and a band of ...
Richard E. Beringer, Herman Hattaway, Archer Jones, and William N. Still Jr., The Elements of Confederate Defeat: Nationalism, War Aims, and Religion (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 988), 20. 26. Chapters have been incorporated ...
Two valuable collections of primary sources are William J. Kimball's Richmond in Time of War , and Katherine M. Jones's Ladies of Richmond : Confederate Capital . Kimball's volume is a " canned source ” designed primarily to be used in ...
McMillan, Malcolm C., ed. The Alabama Confederate Reader. Tuscaloosa, Ala., 1963; reprint, 1992. McNeilly, James H. “In Winter Quarters at Dalton, Ga. ... Nisbet, James Cooper. Four Years on the Firing Line. 1914; 386 WORKS CITED.
1861 Emory M. Thomas ... The choir sang, and Pastor John A. Jones preached a farewell sermon to his son, who was a member of the Light Guards; the rest of the volunteer soldiers; and the eight hundred other citizens who packed the space ...
10) Moore, Andrew B., 30, 185 Moore, Bartholomew F., 38 Moore, Marinda, 181–83 Moore, Thomas O., 137, 158, 319-20 (n. ... 156; persistent political conflict in, 160; early Vance administration, 163–65; opposition and support for Davis, ...
The Revolution of 1861
The Confederate Experience Reader provides students and professors with the essential materials needed to understand and appreciate the major issues confronting the Southern Republic's brief existence during the American Civil...
Phillip Thomas Tucker, Ph.D. Has authored or edited over 20 books on various aspects of the American experience, especially in the fields of Civil War, Irish, African-American, Revolutionary, and Southern history.
3; Priscilla Bond Diary, May 13, May 16, 1862, LSU; quoted in George Rable, Civil Wars: Women and the Crisis of Southern Nationalism (Urbana, 1989), 179, and see also the analysis at 154–180. On the Revolutionary War, see Kerber, ...
In early March, General Jackson put his army of just over 4,000 men on the march, daring General Nathaniel Banks to do battle with his army of 25,000 recently arrived from Frederick, Maryland. Banks did not take up the challenge, ...