The Civil War

  • The Civil War: Weapons
    By Jim Ollhoff

    The American Civil War continues to be one of the most significant events in US history.

  • The Civil War: The National View
    By Francis Newton Thorpe

    Talbot collection of British pamphlets

  • The Civil War: Telecourse Student Guide
    By Ken Burns

    This companion student guide outlines a nine-week course of study that amounts to a complete college credit course.

  • The Civil War: War is all hell, 1865. Episode 8

    Sherman marches to the sea, Lincoln is inaugurated, Lee's army flees to Appomattox and surrenders.

  • The Civil War
    By Patricia D. Netzley

    Other books in the Greenhaven Encyclopedia series: Ancient Egypt Ancient Rome Greek and Roman Mythology The Middle Ages The Vietnam War Witchcraft THE GREENHAVEN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF Daniel Leone, President Bonnie Szumski, Publisher.

  • The Civil War: Red River to Appomattox. 1st ed. 1974
    By Shelby Foote

    Selected by the Modern Library as one of the 100 best nonfiction books of all time Twenty years ago, in 1954, novelist Shelby Foote began this monumental work with...

  • The Civil War: Early Battles
    By Jim Ollhoff

    The American Civil War continues to be one of the most significant events in US history.

  • The Civil War
    By Don Nardo

    The Civil War is one of the most commonly studied topics in curriculum, but this book brings a fresh, interesting take.

  • The Civil War: A Nation Divided
    By Don Nardo, Therese M. Shea

    The Civil War still holds a prominent place in the American imagination—reenactments and battlefield visits are popular tourist attractions for both Northerners and Southerners.

  • The Civil War
    By Paul Alan Cimbala

    From the initial enlistment and recruitment of men for the opposing armies, through their demobilization during the spring, summer, and fall of 1865, Paul A. Cimbala always places the solider...

  • The Civil War
    By Don Nardo

    The Civil War is one of the most commonly studied topics in curriculum, but this book brings a fresh, interesting take.

  • The Civil War: Slavery and the Crisis of Union
    By Laurel R. Singleton

    The unit presented here explores questions about when people should challenge authority through a study of the Civil War and slavery. The booklet is divided into six sections. The first and last are an introduction and review respectively.

  • The Civil War: & the Wars in Alexandria, Africa and Spain
    By Gaius Caesar

    This is a bilingual edition featuring the original Latin text paralel to an English translation.

  • The Civil War: An Interactive History Adventure
    By Matt Doeden

    "3 story paths, 47 choices, 20 endings"--Cover.

  • The Civil War: 1861-1865
    By James I. Robertson

    Young readers learn and interact with the battles between the Union and the Confederacy through the epic paintings of America’s foremost historical artist, Mort Künstler The Civil War takes readers on a chronological journey of the most ...

  • The Civil War: The Best of American Heritage
    By Stephen W. Sears

    For almost 50 years, the Civil War has occupied a central place in the pages of American Heritage magazine. This collection draws from the entire range of writing and includes...

  • The Civil War: A History
    By Harry Hansen

    Lieutenant General D. H. Hill considered an attack impracticable , and Major General T. C. Hindman wanted to wait on Hill . ... which in turn had to meet the advancing divisions of Major Generals John M. Palmer and Joseph J. Reynolds .

  • The Civil War
    By Jonathan Sutherland, Diane Canwell

    "America's Civil War, or the War of the Rebellion, was a cataclysmic event for a country less than 100 years old.

  • The Civil War: Weapons
    By Jim Ollhoff

    The American Civil War continues to be one of the most significant events in US history.

  • The Civil War: With the Anonymous Alexandrian, African, and Spanish Wars
    By Julius Caesar

    ... Pharnaces , who had taken care not to be on the losing side , than to himself , to whom the immortal gods had granted victory . He would therefore take no action against Pharnaces for the very serious harm he had inflicted on Romans who ...