The Decision for
Emancipation
1862
by Francis B. Carpenter

Marion B. Lucas
Professor of History and
University Distinguished
Professor
Office CH 224-B
Office Ph. (270) 745-5736
Office Fax (270) 745-2950
e-mail: marion.lucas@wku.edu
Home Ph. (270) 843-8580
WKU
History Department Home Page
SUMMER
2005
Hist 443 CLASS INSTRUCTIONS Summer 2005
M.B. Lucas
CH 224-B
Office Phone: (270) 745-5736
Office Fax: (270) 745-2950
e-mail: marion.lucas@wku.edu
http://www.wku.edu/~marion.lucas/
Text:
No required text. If you feel you need a
text, I suggest one of the following: *James M. McPherson, Ordeal
By Fire
(latest edition); James M. McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom
(1988); William
L. Barney, Battleground for the Union (1990); Michael Fellman,
et al., This
Terrible War (2003); J.G. Randall & David Donald, Civil War
and
Reconstruction (latest edition). *best
Hist 443-G CLASS INSTRUCTIONS Summer 2005
M.B. Lucas
CH 224-B
Office Phone: (270) 745-5736
Office Fax: (270) 745-2950
e-mail: marion.lucas@wku.edu
http://www.wku.edu/~marion.lucas/
Text: McPherson, James M. Ordeal By Fire: The Civil War and Reconstruction (latest edition). Purchasing McPherson is optional.
Hour Tests:
There will be a midterm exam and a final. Both tests come from the
lectures, but the final exam will also contain a question on your
outside
reading. The midterm counts 25% of your grade, the final 40%. Parallel
Reading Assignment: 1,000 pages. Your reading will come from books and
journals on the Civil War and Reconstruction from the Helm-Cravens
Library
(or any library available to you). You should make an attempt to read
books
and articles written since 1980. Use the Select Bibliography as a
point of departure. Read about 100 pages (or fewer) from each book you
choose. Look up each author for personal information which might
help you understand the writer's approach. Look at the table of
contents,
evaluate the book as a whole, and then read the most pertinent pages.
Look
for interpretations, points of view, etc. Take a few notes to refresh
your
memory when studying for the final exam. There will be a question about
your outside reading on the final exam, and you must write your answer
FROM
MEMORY. Be sure to keep a record of the number of pages you
read from each book. You should also read several articles. You are
required
to peruse and become familiar with the important Civil War journals,
such
as:
Civil War History, Journal of Southern History, Filson Historical
Quarterly, Register of the Kentucky Historical Society, and Civil
War
magazines, such as: Civil War Times, Blue and Gray, North &
South,
etc.
You need to have some idea of what these journals and magazines
contain.
In addition, look at the Official Records of the War of Rebellion
and the Official Records Atlas. Read a few pages from several
volumes
to get an idea of their content. You should also become familiar with
the
first three (3) pages of the select bibliography.
AT
THE MIDTERM EXAM YOU MUST HAND IN A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF YOUR READINGS. AT
THE
LAST CLASS PERIOD YOU MUST HAND IN A COMPLETE BIBLIOGRAPHY OF YOUR
SEMESTER'S
READINGS, correctly citing the books and articles you read.
Class Discussions, Presentations, & Web Site Analysis: Please feel free to ask questions in class. Each student is required to report on one article read for this class (about 5 minutes). You also be required to participate in a discussion of the "Battle of Gettysburg." Also, as part of your readings, you must hand in at the midterm exam a three to four (3-4) page review-evaluation of one (1) web site on the Civil War. Be discriminatory.Your readings, class participation, and web site analysis count 10% of your grade.
Research Paper: The research paper is a very important part of this class. It should be about thirteen (13) pages long, including bibliography and notes. You must find and cite at least ten (10) sources (manuscripts, documents, articles, books). You may use up to three (3) internet "history" sources and an unlimited number of internet "documentary" sources, but you must cite at lease ten (10) "hardcopy" sources. YOU MUST MAKE AN EFFORT TO FIND MANUSCRIPTS FOR YOUR PAPER IN THE KENTUCKY LIBRARY. You may use FOOTNOTES OR ENDNOTES but you must use the Footnote or Endnote Style for History Papers and Bibliographies illustrated below, or found in Mary Lynn Rampolla, A Pocket Guide to Writing in History (latest edition). The research paper counts 25% of your grade. Grades will be reduced for late papers. Click here for WKU library research information. Click here for web writing tutor assistance.
Dates for research paper:
Thursday, Jan. 29, topics due.
Thursday, Feb. 12, preliminary bibliographies
due.
Thursday, March 18, notes due.
Thursday, April 22, research paper due.
Absences: You are allowed two (2) excused absences, no questions asked. Upon your third absences you will be assigned make-up work. In the event that you accumulate more than six (6) absences, you will be dropped with a failing grade.
Text: McPherson, James M. Ordeal By Fire: The Civil War and Reconstruction (latest edition). Purchasing McPherson is optional.
Hour Tests:
There will be a midterm exam and a final. Both tests come from the
lectures, but the final exam will also contain a question on your
outside
reading. The midterm counts 25% of your grade, the final 40%. Parallel
Reading Assignment: 1,300 pages. Your reading will come from books and
journals on the Civil War and Reconstruction from the Helm-Cravens
Library
(or any library available to you). You should make an attempt to read
books
and articles written since 1980. Use the Select Bibliography as a
point of departure. Read about 100 pages (or fewer) from each book you
choose. Look up each author for personal information which might
help you understand the writer's approach. Look at the table of
contents,
evaluate the book as a whole, and then read the most pertinent pages.
Look
for interpretations, points of view, etc. Take a few notes to refresh
your
memory when studying for the final exam. There will be a question about
your outside reading on the final exam, and you must write your answer
FROM
MEMORY. Be sure to keep a record of the number of pages you
read from each book. You should also read several articles. You are
required
to peruse and become familiar with the important Civil War journals,
such
as:
Civil War History, Journal of Southern History, Filson Historical
Quarterly, Register of the Kentucky Historical Society, and Civil
War
magazines, such as: Civil War Times, Blue and Gray, North &
South,
etc.
You need to have some idea of what these journals and magazines
contain.
In addition, look at the Official Records of the War of Rebellion
and the Official Records Atlas. Read a few pages from several
volumes
to get an idea of their content. You should also become familiar with
the
first three (3) pages of the select bibliography.
AT
THE MIDTERM EXAM YOU MUST HAND IN A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF YOUR READINGS. AT
THE
LAST CLASS PERIOD YOU MUST HAND IN A COMPLETE BIBLIOGRAPHY OF YOUR
SEMESTER'S
READINGS, correctly citing the books and articles you read.
Class Discussions, Presentations, & Web Site Analysis: Please feel free to ask questions in class. Each student is required to report on one article read for this class (about 5 minutes). You also be required to participate in a discussion of the "Battle of Gettysburg." Also, as part of your readings, you must hand in at the midterm exam a three to four (3-4) page review-evaluation of one (1) web site on the Civil War. Be discriminatory.Your readings, class participation, and web site analysis count 10% of your grade.
Research Paper: The research paper is a very important part of this class. It should be about fifteen (15) pages long, including bibliography and notes. You must find and cite at least ten (10) sources (manuscripts, documents, articles, books). You may use up to three (3) internet "history" sources and an unlimited number of internet "documentary" sources, but you must cite at lease ten (10) "hardcopy" sources. YOU MUST MAKE AN EFFORT TO FIND MANUSCRIPTS FOR YOUR PAPER IN THE KENTUCKY LIBRARY. You may use FOOTNOTES OR ENDNOTES but you must use the Footnote or Endnote Style for History Papers and Bibliographies illustrated below, or found in Mary Lynn Rampolla, A Pocket Guide to Writing in History (latest edition). The research paper counts 25% of your grade. Grades will be reduced for late papers. Click here for WKU library research information. Click here for writing tutor assistance.
Dates for research paper:
Thursday, Jan. 29, topics due.
Thursday, Feb. 12, preliminary bibliographies
due.
Thursday, March 18, notes due.
Thursday, April 22, research paper due.
Absences: You are allowed two (2) excused absences, no questions asked. Upon your third absences you will be assigned make-up work. In the event that you accumulate more than six (6) absences, you will be dropped with a failing grade.
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U.S.
Grant
R.E.Lee
History 443: Select Civil War Articles, Spring 2004
Alexander, Ted "'A Regular Slave Hunt': The
Army
of Northern Virginia and Black Civilians in the Gettysburg Campaign,"
North
& South 4 (2001): 82-89.
Andreasen, Bryon C. "Proscribed Preachers, New Churches: Civil Wars
in the Illinois Protestant Churches during the Civil
War." CWH 44 (1998):
194-211.
Becker, Carl. "Everyman His Own Historian." AHR 37 (1932):
221-36.
Beard, Charles A. "Written History as an Act of Faith." AHR 39
(1934):219-31.
Beard, Charles A. "That Noble Dream." AHR 41 (1935):
Carmichael, Peter S. "‘Oh, for the presence and inspiration of Old
Jack': A Lost Cause Plea for Stonewall Jackson at
Gettysburg." CWH
41 (1995): 161-67.
Craig, Berry F. "The Jackson Purchase Considers Secession: The 1861
Mayfield Convention." The Register of the Kentucky
Historical Society
99 (2001): 339-62.
Dwyer, Christopher S. "Raiding Strategy: As Applied by the Western
Confederate Cavalry in the American Civil War." The
Journal of Military
History
63 (999): 263-81.
Engle, Stephen D. "Don Carlos Buell: Military Philosophy and Command
Problems in the West." CWH 41 (1995): 89-115.
Epperson, James F. "Lee's Slave-Makers," Civil
War Times Illustrated 41 (2002): 44-49.
Fehrenbacher, Don E. "The Making of a Myth: Lincoln and the
Vice-Presidential
Nomination in 1864." CWH 41 (1995):
273-90.
Fisher, Noel. "‘The Leniency Shown Them Has Been Unavailing': The
Confederate
Occupation of East Tennessee." CWH 40
(1994): 275-91.
Foner, Eric. "The Causes of the American Civil War: Recent
Interpretations
and New Directions." CWH 20 (1974): 197-214.
Gallagher, Gary W. "An Old-Fashioned Soldier in a Modern War? Robert
E. Lee as Confederate General." CWH 45 (1999):
295-321.
Grimsley, Mark. "Conciliation and Its Failure, 1861-1862." CWH
39 (1993): 317-35.
Hattaway, Herman and Archer Jones, "Lincoln as Military Strategist."
CWH
26 (1980): 293-303.
Huston, James L. "Southerners against Secession: The Arguments of the
Constitutional
Unionists in 1850-51." CWH 46
(2000): 281-99.
Koerting, Gayla. "For Law and Order: Joseph Holt, the Civil War, and
the Judge Advocate General's Department." The
Register of the Kentucky
Historical Society 97 (1999): 1-25.
Leonard, Elizabeth D. "Civil War Nurse, Civil War Nursing: Rebecca
Usher of Maine." CWH 41 (1995): 190-207.
Lucas, Marion B. "Camp Nelson, Kentucky, During the Civil War: Cradle
of Liberty or Refugee Death Camp?" The Filson
Club History Quarterly
63 (1989): 439-52.
Lucas, Marion B. "John G. Fee, the Berea Exiles, and the 1862
Confederate
Invasion of Kentucky." The Filson Historical
Quarterly 75 (Spring
2001): 155-180.
Lucas, Scott J. "‘Indignities, Wrongs, and Outrages': Military and
Guerrilla Incursions on Kentucky's Civil War Home Front."
The Filson Club History
Quarterly 73 (1999): 355-76.
MacDonnell, Francis. "The Confederate Spin on Winfield Scott and George
Thomas." CWH 44 (1998): 255-66.
Miller, Edward A., Jr. "Garland H. White, Black Army Chaplain." CWH
43 (1997): 201-18.
Neely, Mark E., Jr., "Was the Civil War a Total War?" CWH 37
(1991): 27-28.
Ransom, Roger L. "Fact and Counterfact: The Second American
Revolution."
CWH
45 (1999): 28-60.
Roberts, William H. "‘The Name of Ericsson': Political Engineering
in the Union Ironclad Program, 1861-1863." The Journal
of Military History
63, (1999): 823-43.
Rowland, Thomas J. "In the Shadows of Grant and Sherman: George B.
McClellan Revisited." CWH 40 (1994): 202-25.
Storey, Margaret M. "Civil War Unionists and the Political Culture
of Loyalty in Alabama, 1860-1861." JSH 69 (2003):
71-106.
Tap, Bruce. "‘These Devils are not fit to live on God's earth': War
Crimes and the Committee on the Conduct of the War,
1864-1865." CWH 42
(1996): 116-32.
Urwin, Gregory J.W. "‘We cannot treat negroes . . . as prisoners of
war': Racial Atrocities and Reprisals in Civil War
Arkansas." CWH 42
(1996): 193-210.
Weitz, Mark A. "Drill, Training, and the Combat Performance of the
Civil War Soldier: Dispelling the Myth of the Poor
Soldier, Great Fighter."
The
Journal of Military History 62 (1998): 263-89.
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Footnote Style for History Courses
Manuscripts
Documents
In a note:
Books
In a note:
Articles
Newspapers
Web Cites
Language is essential, even vital for the study
of
history. Purchase a good dictionary. I recommend Webster's
New World Dictionary (latest edition). I also
recommend
that you purchase, and keep with you when studying or writing, Shirley
M. Miller, comp., Webster's New World
33,000
Word Book (latest edition). This book will give
you
the correct spelling and dividing of most-used words. To improve
your vocabulary, I recommend purchasing a vocabulary study book such as
Norman Lewis, Word Power Made Easy
(latest edition) or Wilfred Funk and Norman Lewis. 30
Days to a More Powerful Vocabulary (latest editon) and,
of course, retain your English grammar book for reference. Such
works
will enable you to improve your vocabulary significantly. I
suggest
that you approach vocabulary study systematically. Decide on a
plan
such as learning one new word a day, or perhaps more practically, three
words a week. Once you develop a plan which works for you, stick
with it.
One more tip. Learn the key rules of grammar
this semester. Know the difference between plurals and
possessives.
Know what a comma splice [run-on or fused sentence] is. Learn the
proper use of the apostrophe. And remember: commas and periods
are
always inside quotation marks, [," or ."]
and colons and semicolons are always outside quotation marks [";
or ":]. Learn these simple rules and you will
eliminate
90 percent of the most typical errors made in grammar. One more
suggestion.
Look up "topic sentence" in your grammar book and review the ideas
suggested
for writing them.
Capitalize: South when you write or talk about: the South; the Old
South; Deep South (a place).
Use a small "s" when you say: go south (direction).
Capitalize: Civil War.
The correct use of the verb, to secede [often confused with other words
such as succeed]: The South seceded from the Union; Kentucky's leaders
concluded that seceding from the Union would be unwise; the secession
of southern states began in South Carolina.
abated, abrogate, acrimonious, adamant, adulation, aegis,
aesthetics,
affable, affluent, aggregate, alleviation, amiable, ambiguous,
ambivalent,
amenable, amoral, amphibious, analogy, anonymity, antebellum,
antediluvian,
anti-clerical, antipathy, appeasement, articulate, assiduous, assuage,
astute, austere, avarice, baroque, bellicose, blatantly, bombastic,
bulwark,
capitulate, capricious, caricature, cataclysmic, cause
célèbre,
cholera, clandestine, cogent, collaborate, complicity, conciliation,
concordat,
condoned, congenial, consternation, contiguous, convivial, coterie,
coup
d'état, covenant, credibility, crucible, dauphin, dearth,
debacle,
debilitated, debilitating, decorum, defame, deistic, delineate,
demographic,
derisively, détente, deterrent, devotion, didactic, diffidence,
diffusion, dint, discursive, disparage, doggedly, dogmatism, dogmatist,
doldrums, dole, dragoons, duplicity, egalitarian, egregious,
electorate,
elegy, elucidate, emanate, emancipate, empirical, emulators, enigmatic,
enmity, entities, enunciated, epitomize, eschewed, estrangement,
ethereal,
ethics, euphemism, euphoria, exchequer, expropriation, extralegal, fait
accompli, feints, fetters, flagrant, fledgling, flout, fluctuation,
foment,
freemason, galvanize, garner, hegemony, hierarchy, ideological,
impecunious,
imperious, impetuosity, impetus, impinged, inculcate, incumbent,
indelible,
indemnification, indemnity, indigenous, ineptitude, ineptitude,
ineptitude,
ineptly, inequities, inexorable, inextricably, inimical, innate,
insidious,
instigators, interregnum, intransigent, intrusion, intuition, irony,
irrational,
laissez faire, lucrative, ludicrous, machinations, maldistribution,
melee,
mercurial, metaphysics, meticulous, monograph, moot, mundane,
neoabsolutism,
nominal, oligarchy, opulent, oscillated, palatable, palpably,
paradoxical,
paternalism, patriarch, patronage, paucity, pecuniary, penchant,
perfidy,
perfunctory, prerogative, perquisite, philanderer, pietist, pilloried,
pinnacle, plausible, plebiscite, pluralism, plurality, polemics,
posthumous,
postulate, preclude, preemptive, prerogative, prig, pristine, prodigy,
profligate, promulgated, propound, protectorate, protracted, purveyor,
putsch, quelling, rabid, rapprochement, rationality, recalcitrant,
recapitulate,
refractory, refractory, reminiscent, remunerate, residue, resilience,
retrograde,
reverberations, rigid, rudiments, sagacious, sectarian, secularism,
seminal,
servitude, sovereignty, spawned, spurn, status quo, sumptuary,
superannuated,
supranational, syllogisms, syndicates, synonymous, technocrats,
tempering,
temporize, tercentenary, titular, touchstone, transcendence,
transcendental,
trauma, traumatic, tremulous, truculent, tutelage, ubiquitous,
ulterior,
unabashed, unicameral, unpalatable, usurpation, vagrancy, veneer,
verbiage,
verve, vilify virile, vituperate, virulent, vociferous, volatile,
waning,
waxing, writ
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| Wade Hampton | States Rights Gist |
I. Bibliographies.
1. Freidel, et al., eds., Harvard Guide to
American
History (2 vols; 1973).
2. Library of Congress, Guide to the Study of
the United States of America (1960).
3. American Historical Association, Guide to
Historical Literature (1962).
4. U.S. Army, The Era of the Civil
War-1820-1876.
Special Bibliographic Series, No. 11.Carlisle
Barracks,
Pa.: U.S. Army Military History Institute, 1982.
5. Excellent bibliographies can be found in many current texts such
as, James M. McPherson, J.G.
Randall, David Donald, etc.
II. Periodical Literature.
1. The American Historical Review.
2. The Mississippi Valley Historical Review,
renamed Journal of American History 1964.
3. The Journal of Southern History.
4. Civil War History.
5. The Filson Club History Quarterly.
6. The Register of the Kentucky Historical
Society.
These are the principal
journals
dealing with the material of this course, nos. 5 and 6 referring
specifically
to Kentucky. You might also want to be familiar with the highly
popular
magazines such as Kentucke: The Magazine of Bluegrass State
Heritage,Civil
War Times Illustrated, Blue & Gray Magazine, and
Civil
War (magazine of CW society).
III. Reference Aids.
1. Adams and Coleman, eds. Dictionary of
American
History (5 vols., 1940).
2. Johnson and Malone, eds. Dictionary of
American Biography (20 vols., 1928-1937;
Supplements
1-2, 1944-1958).
3. Morris and Commager. Encyclopedia of
American
History (1962)
4. Boatner. Civil War Dictionary (1959).
5. Warner. Generals in Blue (1954)
6. Warner. Generals in Gray (1964)
7. Spiller and Dawson, eds. Dictionary of
American Military Biography (3 vols., 1984).
8. Roller and Twyman, eds. Encyclopedia of
Southern History (1979).
9. Esposito, ed. The West Point Atlas of
American
Wars (2 vols., 1959).
10. Patricia L. Faust, ed., Historical Times
Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Civil War (1986).
11. Wakelyn, Jon L. Biographical
Dictionary
of the Confederacy (1977).
12. *Woodworth, Steven E., ed. The American
Civil War: A Handbook of Literature and
Research (1996).
13. Eicher, David J. The Civil War in Books: An Analytical
Bibliography
(1996).
* A must buy for anyone interested in the Civil War.
IV. The Classics.
1. James Ford Rhodes, History of the United
States from the Compromise of 1850 (7 vols., 1893-1906). He
made
the first attempt to write a thorough, complete history of the Civil
War.
His accomplishment cannot be underestimated. Until about 1950,
anyone
writing a general history of the Civil War was revising Rhodes in the
light
of later research. You need not read his work, but know who he is, as
well
as John Bach McMaster, Herman E. von Holst, E. P. Oberholtzer, et. al.,
the "national" historians who covered the material of the course.
Though their research is out of date, a student should have a nodding
acquaintance
with them. One other classic falls in the same category.
You
should have at least heard of Channing, History of the United States
(6 vols., 1905-1925), which covers the period through the war.
2. Allan Nevins, in The Ordeal of the Union,
(2 vols., 1947), The Emergence of Lincoln (2 vols., 1950), and War
for the Union (4 vols., 1959-1971), attempted to restate Rhodes,
but
only reached 1865 before his death. The first four volumes carry
the story through Lincoln's inauguration. The next four volumes
cover
the war. Nevins' work is outstanding and should be consulted.
3. Be sure to look through the photographic accounts of the Civil War,
such as: Miller, Francis T., ed. The Photographic History of the
Civil
War (10 vols., 1957; orig. pub. 1911); Milhollen, Hirst D. and
Milton
Kaplan, eds. (with a narrative by David Donald) Divided We Fought:
A
Pictorial History of the War 1861-1865 (1952); and Davis, William
C.
The
Image of War, 1861-1865 (6 vols., 1981-1984).
4. The best one-volume history of the Civil War
is James M. McPherson, Battle Cry Of Freedom: The Civil War
Era
(1988);
Robert Leckie, None Died in Vain: The Saga of the American
Civil
War (1990) is also readable.
5. The best one-volume history of Reconstruction
is Eric Foner, Reconstruction: America's Unfinished
Revolution
1863-1877 (1988).
6. Beard, Charles A. and Mary Beard, The Rise
of American Civilization (4 vols., 1927-1942)
should be noted as the classical economic
interpretation
of the period.
7. Buel and Johnson, eds. Battles and Leaders
(4 vols., 1887).
V. The Cooperatives.
1. Hart, ed. The American Nation (28
vols.,
1904-1917).
2. Johnson, ed. The Chronicles of America
(50 vols., 1918-1951).
3. Schlesinger and Fox, eds. A History of
American Life (13 vols., 1927-1948).
4. David, et. el. The Economic History of
the United States (1945-).
5. Stephenson and Coulter, eds. History of
the South (10 vols., 1947-1984).
6. Commager and Morris, eds. The New American
Nation Series (1954-)
VI. Special Subjects
1. Cash, W.J. The Mind of the South
(1941).
2. Gabriel, Ralph H. The Course of American
Democratic Thought (1956).
3. Howard, John T. Our American Music
(1965).
4. Kelly, Alfred H. and Winfred A. Harbison.
The
American Constitution: Its Origins and
Development
(1967).
5. Kirkland, Edward C. A History of American
Economic Thought (1969).
6. Larkin, O.W. Art and Life in America
(1960).
7. Parrington, Vernon L. Main Currents in
American Thought (3 vols., 1927-1930).
8. Perry, Lewis, Intellectual Life in America : A History
(1984).
9. Persons, Stow. American Minds: A History
of Ideas (1958).
VII. Select Classic Articles.
Adams, Henry. "The Great Secession Winter of
1860-1861." Mass. Hist. Soc. Proceedings 43
(1909-1910): 660-87.
Becker, Carl. "Everyman His Own Historian." AHR
37 (1932): 221-36; Charles A. Beard, "Written History as an Act of
Faith,"
AHR
39 (1934):219-31; Charles A. Beard, "That Noble Dream," AHR 41
(1935):.
These three articles should be read by every graduate student.
Bestor, Arthur. "The American Civil War as a
Constitutional Crisis." AHR 69 (1964): 327-52.
Bonner, Thomas N. "Civil War Historians and the
'Needless War' Doctrine." MVHR (1954).
Brown, George W. "Trends Toward the Formation
of A Southern Confederacy." JNH 18 (July
1933): 256-81.
Cole, A.C. "The South and the Right of Secession
in the Early Fifties." MVHR I (1914): 376-99.
Foner, Eric. "The Causes of the American Civil
War: Recent Interpretations and New Directions."
Civil War History 20
(1974): 197-214.
Hamilton, J.G. DeRoulhac. "Lincoln's Election
as Immediate Menace to Slavery in the States?"AHR
27 (1932): 700-711.
DuBois, W.E.B. "Reconstruction and Its Benefits." AHR 4 (1910):
781-799.
Hamilton, Holman. "Democratic Senate Leadership
and the Compromise of 1850." MVHR 41
(1954): 403-18.
Hartz, Louis Hartz, "The Reactionary
Enlightenment,"
in The Liberal Tradition in American
History (1955).
Hattaway, Herman and Archer Jones, "Lincoln as Military Strategist,"
Civil
War History 26
(1980): 293-303.
Johnson, Ludwell H. "Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis as War
Presidents:
Nothing Succeeds
Like Success." Civil War History 27 (1981):
49-63.
Klingberg, Frank E. "James Buchanan and the
Crisis
of the Union." JSH 9 (1943): 455-74.
Owsley, Frank L. "The Fundamental Cause of the
Civil War: Egocentric Sectionalism." JSH 7
(1941): 3-18.
Paludin, Philip S. "The American Civil War as a Crisis of Law and
Order."
AHR
77 (1972):
1013-34.
Phillips, U.B. "The Central Theme of Southern
History." AHR 34 (1928): 3-43.
Ramsdell, Charles W. "Lincoln and Fort Sumter."
JSH
3 (1937): 259-88.
Ramsdell, Charles W. "The Natural Limits of
Slavery
Expansion." MVHR 16 (1929): 151-71.
Randall, James G. "The Blundering Generation."
MVHR
27 (1949): 3-28.
Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr., "The Causes of the
Civil War: A Note on Historical Sentimentalism."
Partisan Review 16
(1949): 969-81.
Seller, Charles Grier, Jr., "The Travail of
Slavery"
in The Southerner as American (1960), C.G. Sellers, Jr., ed.
Stampp, Kenneth M. "The Irrepressible Conflict."
in Stampp, The Imperiled Union (1980):
191-245.
Vandiver, Frank. "The Confederacy and the
American
Tradition." JSH (1962): 277-86.
VIII. Important Historians
You should at least have a
nodding acquaintance with the ideas, interpretations, and books of the
historians, old and new, great and small, who have concerned themselves
with the Civil War. Here are only a few: Dan T. Carter, A.O.
Cravens,
David Donald, Drew G. Faust, Don E. Fehrenbacher, Eric Foner, D.S.
Freeman,
Gary W. Gallagher, William E. Gienapp, Joseph T. Glatthaar, Mark
Grimsley,
Louis Hacker, W.B. Heseltine, Richard Hofstadter, Jacqueline Jones,
Lloyd
Lewis, James M. McPherson, Reid Mitchell, Phillip S. Paludan, Michael
Perman,
U.B. Phillips, David Potter, Charles Ramsdell, J. G. Randall, Arthur
Schlesinger,
Jr., James Street, Frank Vandiver, Bell I. Wiley, Kenneth P. Williams,
T.H. Williams, C. Vann Woodward, Steven E. Woodworth, Bertram
Wyatt-Brown.
And while you are at it, take
a look at some of the traditional impressionistic works on the
south:
Ben Robertson, Red Hills and Cotton; W.J. Cash, Mind of the
South
(1941); Johnathan Daniels, A Southerner Discovers the South
(1938);
Harry Ashmore, An Epitaph for Dixie; Melton A. McLaurin, Separate
Pasts (1987), John Egerton, The Americanization of Dixie: the
Southernization
of America (1974).
IX. Civil War Links:
The
American Civil War Homepage
H-Net: Humanities & Social Studies
OnLine
H-CIVWAR Home Page
H-South: The History
of the American South
John
Brown and the Valley of the Shadow
The American
Civil War, 1861-1865
Excerpts from
Slave Narratives
The World Wide Web Virtual
Library: History
Historical Text
Archive
Social
Sciences Virtual Library
History
Links on the Internet
Voice of
the Shuttle: History Page
History
Resources on the Internet
US
Civil War Information
American Historical Association
Organization of
American Historians
Southern Historical
Association
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I. The Failure of Finality.
A. Topics:
The U.S. in 1850, fire-eaters, northern farmers- laborers, immigration,
homestead bill, northern manufacturers, the manufacturer's program and
problems, abolition and anti-slavery movement, compromise of 1850,
Fugitive
Slave Law, Uncle Tom's Cabin, the pro-slavery argument, the northern
political
situation.
B. Select Bibliography.
Ashworth, John. Slavery, Capitalism and Politics
in the Antebellum Republic, Vol. I, Commerce
and Compromise, 1820-1850
(1995).
Baum, Dale. The Civil War Party System:
The Case of Massachusetts (1984).
Carpenter, J.T. The South As A Conscious
Minority,
1789-1861 (1930).
Carwardine, Richard. Evangelicals and Politics in Antebellum
America (1993 ).
Cole, A.C. The Irrepressible Conflict, 1850-1865
(1934).
Cooper, William J., Jr. The South and the Politics of Slavery,
1828-1856
(1978).
Craven, Avery O. The Growth of Southern
Nationalism,
1848-1861 (1953).
Eaton, Clement. The Growth of Southern
Civilization
(1961).
Filler, Louis. The Crusade Against Slavery,
1830-1860
(1960).
Gara, Larry. The Liberty Line: The
Legend of the Underground Railroad (1961).
Milton, George Fort. The Eve of Conflict:
Stephen Douglass and the Needless War (1934).
Perritt, Henry H. Robert Barnwell Rhett (1972).
Rozwenc, Edwin C., ed. The Causes of the American
Civil War (1961).
Sewell, Richard H. Ballots for Freedom:
Antislavery
Politics in the United States, 1837-1860
(1976).
Taylor, George R. The Transportation Revolution,
1815-1860 (1951).
Walther, Eric. The Fire-Eaters (1992).
White, Laura. Robert Barnwell Rhett (1931).
Woodward, C. Vann. The Burden of Southern History
(1968).
Wright, Gavin. The Political Economy of the
Cotton
South (1978).
II. Slavery Disrupts the Compromise.
A. Topics:
Franklin Pierce, Manifest Destiny, Pacific Railroad Project, Stephen A.
Douglas, Kansas-Nebraska Bill and its effect.
B. Select Bibliography.
Cole, A.C. The Whig Party in the South (1913).
Gara, Larry. The presidency of Franklin Pierce (1991).
Hammond, Bray. Banks and Politics in America
to 1860 (1957).
Johanssen, Robert. Stephen A. Douglas (1973).
Merk, Frederick. Manifest Destiny and Mission
in American History: A Reinterpretation (1966).
Weinberg, A.K. Manifest Destiny (1958).
III. The Rise of the Republican
Party:
The North Finds its Party.
A. Topics:
Sectional polarization, nativism and the Know Nothing Party, the
collapse
of Know-Nothingism, rise of the Republican Party, William H. Seward and
his ideas, Congress 1854-1856.
B. Select Bibliography.
Anbinder, Tyler. Nativism and Slavery:
The Northern Know Nothings and the Politics of the 1850s (1992).
Billington, Ray A. The Protestant Crusade (1938).
Bilotta, James D. Race and the Rise of the Republican Party, 1848-1865
(1992).
Foner, Eric. Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men:
The Ideology of the Republican party before the
Civil War (1980).
Holt, Michael. The Rise and Fall of the American
Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War (1999).
Mayer, George H. The Republican Party, 1854-1864
(1964).
Van Deusen, G.G. Horace Greeley (1953).
Van Deusen, G.G. William H. Seward (1967).
IV. Slavery in Kansas and Congress.
A. Topics:
Northern and Southern migration into Kansas, early government in
Kansas,
the Topeka government, Wakarusa War, sack of Lawrence, Sumner-Brooks
affair,
Pottawatomie Massacre, election of 1856, James Buchanan and his
administration,
Dred Scott Case, Panic of 1857, Lecompton Constitution, Congressional
elections
of 1858, the Lincoln-Douglas debates.
B. Select Bibliography.
Donald, David. Charles Sumner (2 vols.,
1960-1970).
Fehrenbacher, Don E. The Dred Scott Case: Its
Significance in American Law and Politics (1978).
Gienapp, William E. The Origins of the Republican
Party, 1852-1856 (1987).
Goodrich, Thomas. War to the Knife: Bleeding Kansas, 1854-1861 (1998).
Heckman, Richard A. Lincoln vs. Douglas (1967).
Holt, Michael F. The Political Crisis of the 1950s (1978).
Malin, James C. John Brown and the Legend of
1856 (1942).
Morrison, Michael A. Slavery and the American
West: The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of the Civil War
(1997).
Oates, Stephen B. To Purge This Land With Blood
(1970).
V. The Death Struggle of the Union.
A. Topics:
The new Congress, the speakership struggle, Hinton Rowan Helper and The
Impending Crisis, the Davis-Douglas struggle, the Davis Resolutions,
John
Brown, Harper's Ferry, the Democratic convention, the Constitutional
Union
Party, the Baltimore convention, the Republican convention, the 1860
campaign
and results.
B. Select Bibliography.
Bradley, E.S. Simon Cameron: Lincoln's
Secretary of War (1966).
Cain, Marvin R. Lincoln's Attorney General:
Edward Bates of Missouri (1965).
Commager, H.S. Theodore Parker (1936).
Faust, Drew Gilpin. James Henry Hammond and the
Old South (1982).
Furnas, J.C. The Road to Harper's Ferry (1959).
Hendrickson, James E. Joe Lane of Oregon:
Machine Politics and the Sectional Crisis, 1849-1861
(1967).
Katz, Irving. August Belmont: A Political
Biography (1968).
Merritt, Elizabeth. James H. Hammond (1923).
Strode, Hudson, Jefferson Davis (3 vols.,
1955-1964).
Thomas, Benjamin. Abraham Lincoln (1952).
The Battery, Charleston Harbor

VI. Secession.
A. Topics: Southern opinion of Lincoln,
events in S.C., Buchanan's dilemma, attempts at compromise, Lincoln's
role
in compromise, S. C. secedes, Buchanan's actions, Crittenden
Compromise,
seizure of forts, Virginia Peace Conference, Montgomery convention,
Lincoln's
date with destiny, Lincoln's Cabinet, Fort Sumter.
B. Select Bibliography.
Barney, William L. The Secessionist Impulse:
Alabama and Mississippi in 1860 (1974).
Channing, Steven A. Crisis of Fear: Secession
in South Carolina (1970).
Craven, Avery O. Edmund Ruffin (1932).
Current, Richard N. Lincoln and the First Shot
(1963).
Dew, Charles B. Apostles of Disunion: Southern
Secession Commissioners and the Causes of the Civil War (2001).
Garfinkle, Norton, ed. Lincoln and the Coming
of the Civil War (1959).
Gunderson, Robert G. The Old Gentlemen's
Convention:
The Washington Peace Conference of
1861 (1961).
Heck, Frank. "John C. Breckinridge in the Crisis
of 1860-1861," JSH 21 (1955): 316-46.
Helper, Hinton R. The Impending Crisis of the
South (1857).
Kirwan, A.D. John J. Crittenden: The
Struggle
for the Union (1962).
Krug, Mark M. Lyman Trumbull, Conservative
Radical
(1965).
McCardell, John. The Idea of a Southern Nation:
Southern Nationalists and Southern Nationalism,
1830-1860 (1979).
Montgomery, Horace. Howell Cobb's Confederate
Career (1959).
Potter, David. Lincoln and His Party in the
Secession
Crisis (1942).
Sinha, Manisha. The Counterrevolution of Slavery:
Politics and Ideology in Antebellum South Carolina (2000)
Swanberg, W.A. First Blood (1957).
Thompson, William Y. Robert Toombs of Georgia
(1966).
Tilley, John S. Lincoln Takes Command (1941).
Wooster, Ralph A. The Secession Conventions of
the South (1962).
VII. The Field of Honor.
A. Topics:
The sections divide militarily, the Western Virginia Campaign, the Bull
Run Campaign and battle, the two sides: advantages and
disadvantages,
death in the Civil War, tactics, the rifle, cavalry, artillery, Jomini,
organization of armies.
B. Select Bibliography.
Adams, George W. Doctors in Blue (1952).
Barton, Michael. Goodmen: The Character of Civil
War Soldiers (1981).
Beringer, Richard E., and others, Why the South
Lost the Civil War (1986).
Black, Robert C. III. The Railroads of the
Confederacy
(1952).
Bradley, Edwin S. Simon Cameron, Lincoln's
Secretary
of War (1966).
Bruce, Robert V. Lincoln and the Tools of War
(1956).
Buel, Clarence C. and Johnson, Robert V., eds.
Battles and Leaders of the Civil War (4 vols.,
1887).
Catton, Bruce. The Coming Fury (1963).
Catton, Bruce. Mr. Lincoln's Army (1951).
Cochran, Hamilton. Blockade Runners of the
Confederacy
(1958).
Connelly, Thomas L. and Archer Jones. The
Politics
of Command: Factions and Ideas in
Confederate Strategy (1973).
Cunliffe, Marcus. Soldiers and Civilians:
The Martial Spirit in America, 1775-1865 (1968).
Cunningham, H.H. Doctors in Gray (1958).
Dalzell, George W. Flight from the Flag (1940).
Davis, William C. Battle at Bull Run (1977).
Dew, Charles B. Ironmaker of the
Confederacy:
Joseph R. Anderson and the Tredegar Iron
Works (1966).
Donald, David, et. al., eds. Divided We
Faught:
A Pictorial History of the Civil War, 1861-1865
(1953).
Durkin, Joseph T. Stephen R. Mallory (1954).
Edwards, William B. Civil War Guns (1962).
Fite, Emerson D. Social and Industrial Conditions
in the North During the Civil War (1910).
Fox, William F. Regimental Losses in the American
Civil War, 1861-1865 (1889).
Gosnell, H. Allen. Guns on Western Waters:
The Story of River Gunboats in the Civil War (1949).
Grimsley, Mark. The Hard Hand of War: Union Military Policy toward
Southern Civilians,
1861-1865 (1995).
Hagerman, Edward. The American Civil War and
The Origins of Modern Warfare (1988).
Hattaway, Herman and Archer Jones, How the North
Won: A Military History of the Civil War
(1983).
Haydon, F. Stansbury. Aeronautics in the Union
and Confederate Armies (1941).
Jones, Archer. Civil War Command and Strategy
(1992).
Jones, Virgil C. The Civil War at Sea (3 vols.,
1960-1962).
Ketchum, Richard M., ed. The American Heritage
Picture History of the Civil War (1960).
Leech, Margaret. Reveille in Washington (1941).
Linderman, Gerald. Embattled Courage: The
Experience
of Combat in the American Civil War
(1987).
Livermore, Thomas L. Numbers and Losses in the
Civil War in America, 1861-1865 (1901).
Lord, Francis A. Civil War Collectors
Encyclopedia
(5 vols., 1963-89)
McPherson, James M. For Cause and Comrads: Why
Men Fought in the Civil War (1997).
Merrill, James M. The Rebel Shore: The
Story of Union Sea Power in the Civil War (1957).
Millis, Walter. Arms and Men: A Study in
Military History (1956).
Naisawald, L. Van Loan. Grape and Canister:
The Field Artillery of the Army of the Potomac,
1861-1865 (1960).
Owsley, Frank L. The C. S. S. Florida (1965).
Smith, Marritt. Harper's Ferry Armory and the
New Technology: the Challenge of Change (1977).
Summersell, Charles G. The Cruise of the C. S.
S. Sumter (1965).
Turner, George E. Victory Rode the Rails (1953).
Vandiver, Frank E. Ploughshares into
Swords:
Josiah Gorgas and Confederate Ordnance (1952).
Vandiver, Frank E. Rebel Brass: The
Confederate
Command System (1956).
Watkins, Sam R. "Co. Aytch": A Side Show of the Big Show (1962; org.
pub 1882).
Weber, Thomas. Northern Railroads in the Civil
War (1952).
Weigley, Russell F. Quartermaster of the Union
Army, Montgomery C. Meigs (1959).
Wiley, Bell I. The Life of Billy Yank (1952).
Wiley, Bell I. The Life of Johnny Reb (1943).
Williams, Francis L. Matthew Fountain Maury
(1963).
Williams, Kenneth P. Lincoln Finds a
General:
A Military Study of the Civil War (5 vols.,
1949-1959).
Williams, T. Harry. Lincoln and His Generals
(1952).
Confederate Coastal
Defense,
Charleston

VIII. The War in the West in 1862.
A. Topics:
The Northern line, Henry W. Halleck, U.S. Grant, D. C. Buell, Andrew H.
Foote, the Southern line, Albert Sidney Johnston, the river forts,
Henry
and Donelson, Pea Ridge, the war on the Mississippi, Shiloh and
results,
the naval war in 1862: Monitor vs. Merrimac, the blockade, New
Orleans.
B. Select Bibliography.
Ambrose, Stephen E. Halleck: Lincoln's
Chief of Staff (1962).
Castel, Albert. General Sterling Price and the
Civil War in the West (1968).
Catton, Bruce. Grant Moves South (1960).
Catton, Bruce. U. S. Grant and the American
Military
Tradition (1954).
Cooling, B. Franklin. Fort Donelson's Legacy: War and Society in
Kentucky
and Tennessee,
1862-1863 (1997).
Cooling, B. Franklin. Forts Henry and Donelson: The Key to the
Confederate
Heartland (1987).
Daniel, Larry J. Shiloh: The Battle that Changed
the Civil War (1997).
Engle, Stephen D. The American Civil War: The
War in the West 1861 - July 1863(2001).
Engle, Stephen D. Struggle for the Heartland:
The Campaigns from Fort Henry to Corinth (2001).
Fellman, Michael. Citizen Sherman: A Life of William Tecumseh Sherman
(1995).
Fellman, Michael. Inside War: The Guerrilla Conflict in Missouri during
the American Civil War
(1989).
Frank, Joseph A. Seeing the Elephant: Raw Recruits at the Battle of
Shiloh (1989).
Gibson, Charles Dana and E. Kay Gibson. Assault and Logistics: Union
Army Coastal and River
Operations, 1861-1866 (1995).
Goodrich, Thomas. Black Flagg: Guerrilla Warfare on the Western Border,
1861-1865 (1995).
Grant, Ulysses S. Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant
(2 vols., 1885-1886).
Hamilton, James. The Battle of Fort Donelson
(1968).
Hartje, Robert G. Van Dorn: The Life and
Times of a Confederate General (1967).
Hauptman, Laurence M. Between Two Fires: American
Indians in the Civil War (1995).
Hirshson, Stanley P. The White Tecumseh: A Biography of William T.
Sherman (1997).
Lewis, Lloyd. Captain Sam Grant (1950).
Lucas, Marion B. A History of Blacks in Kentucky. Vol. 1: From
Slavery to Segregation,
1760-1891 (1992), Chpt. 7: "Kentucky Blacks
in the Civil War."
Marszalek, John F. Sherman: A Soldier's Passion for Order (1993).
McFeely, William S. Grant: A Biography
(1981).
Noe, Kenneth W. and Shannon H. Wilson, eds. The Civil War in Appalachia
(1997).
Roland, Charles P. Albert Sidney Johnston (1964).
Royster, Charles. The Destructive War: William Tecumseh Sherman,
Stonewall
Jackson, and the
Americans (1991).
Stickles, Arndt M. Simon Bolivar Buckner (1940).
Woodworth, Steven. Jefferson Davis and His Generals: The Failure of
Confederate Command in
the West (1990).
IX. Lee and Jackson in 1862.
A. Topics:
George B. McClellan, the Peninsula Campaign, the rise of Lee, Jackson's
Valley Campaign, the Seven Days, Second Bull Run.
B. Select Bibliography.
Catton, Bruce. Mr. Lincoln's Army (1951).
Connelly, Thomas L. The Marble Man: Robert
E. Lee and His Image in American Society (1977).
Dowdey, Clifford. The Seven Days: The
Emergence
of Lee (1964).
Freeman, Douglas S. Lee's Lieutenants: A Study
in Command (3 vols., 1942-1944).
Freeman, Douglas S. R. E. Lee: A Biography
(4 vols., 1934-1935).
Freeman, Douglas S. and McWhiney, Grady, eds.
Lee's Dispatches: Unpublished Letters . . . to
Davis . . . . (1957).
Furguson, Ernest B. Ashes of Glory: Richmond at War (1996).
Gallagher, Gary W., ed. Fighting Confederate: The personal
Recollections
of General Edward
Porter Alexander (1989).
Gallagher, Gary W. Stephen Dodson Ramseur: Lee's Gallant General
(1985).
Hassler, Warren W., Jr. Commanders of the Army
of the Potomac (1962).
Hassler, Warren W., Jr. General George B.
McClellan:
Shield of the Union (1957).
McClellan, George B. McClellan's Own Story (1887).
Nevins, Allan. Fremont, Pathmarker of the West
(1955).
Robertson, James I. Stonewall Jackson (1997).
Royster, Charles. The Destructive War (1991).
Sears, Stephen W. George B. McClellan: The Young
Napoleon (1988).
Sears, Stephen W. To the Gates of Richmond: The peninsula Campaign
(1992).
Symonds, Craig L. Joseph E. Johnston: A Civil War Biography (1992).
Tanner, Robert G. Stonewall in the Valley (1976).
Thomas, Benjamin P. and Harold Hyman.
Stanton:
The Life and Times of Lincoln's Secretary of
War (1962).
Thomas, Emory. Bold Dragoon: The Life of J.E.B. Stuart (1986).
Thomas, Emory. Robert E. Lee: A Biography (1995).
Vandiver, Frank E. Mighty Stonewall (1957).
Williams, T. Harry. McClellan, Sherman, and Grant
(1962).
X. The Crisis of the Union.
A. Topics: The deteriorating Union position
in the summer of 1862, the invasion of Kentucky, Braxton Bragg, Kirby
Smith,
Lincoln's problems in the North, War Democrats, Loyal Opposition,
growing
Radicalism, Copperheadism, Lincoln and Slavery, desertion, bounties,
the
draft, blacks in the North.
B. Select Bibliography.
Connelly, Thomas L. Army of the Heartland:
The Army of Tennessee, 1861-1862 (1967).
Connelly, Thomas L. Autumn of Glory (1971).
Cornish, Dudley T. The Sable Arm: Negro
Troops in the Union Army, 1861-1865 (1956).
Crozier, Emmet. Yankee Reporters, 1861-65 (1974).
Current, Richard N. The Lincoln Nobody Knows
(1958).
Engle, Stephen D. Don Carlos Buell: Most
Promising
of All (1999).
Fisher, Noel. War at Every Door: Partisan
Politics and Guerrilla Violence in East Tennessee,
1860-1869 (1997).
Harrison, Lowell H. The Civil War in Kentucky
(1975).
Frederickson, George M. The Inner Civil War
(1965).
Glatthaar, Joseph T. Forged in Battle:
The Civil War Alliance of Black Soldiers and White Officers
(1990).
Hallock, Judith Lee. Braxton Bragg and
Confederate
Defeat. (Vol. 2, 1991).
Klement, Frank L. The Copperheads in the Civil
War (1960).
Klement, Frank L. Dark Lanterns: Secret Political Societies,
Conspiracies,
and Treason in the Civil
War (1984).
Linderman, Gerald F. Embattled Courage:
The Experience of Combat in the American Civil War
(1987).
Lucas, Marion B. "Camp Nelson, Kentucky, During the Civil War:
Cradle of Liberty or Refugee
Death Camp?" The Filson Club History Quarterly
63 (Oct. 1989): 439-52.
Martin, Waldo E., Jr. The Mind of Frederick
Douglass
(1985).
McWhiney, Grady. Braxton Bragg and Confederate
Defeat (Vol. 1, 1969).
Neely, Mark E., Jr. The Fate of Liberty: Abraham Lincoln and Civil
Liberties (1991).
Parks, Joseph H. General Edmund Kirby Smith
(1954).
Quarles, Benjamin. Lincoln and the Negro (1962).
Randall, J.G. Lincoln the Liberal Statesman
(1947).
Welcher, Frank J. The Union Army, 1861-1865: Organization and
Operations:
Vol. II: The
Western Theater (1993).
XI. Civil War Diplomacy in the Crisis of
the
Union.
A. Topics:
Confederate diplomacy with England and France, the Trent Affair, the
commerce
destroyers.
B. Select Bibliography.
Bulloch, James D. The Secret Service of the
Confederate
States in Europe (2 vols., 1884).
Crook, D.P. Diplomacy During the American Civil
War (1975).
Cullop, Charles P. Confederate Propaganda in
Europe, 1861-1865 (1969).
Hubbard, Charles C. The Burden of Confederate
Diplomach (1998).
Owsley, Frank L. King Cotton Diplomacy (1931).
Owsley, Frank L. The C. S. S. Florida:
Her Building and Operations (1965).
Spencer, Warren F. The Confederate Navy in Europe
(1983).
Winks, Robin. Canada and the United States:
The Civil War Years (1960).
XII. Antietam and Lincoln Save the Union.
A. Topics:
Effects of Second Bull Run, Antietam and results, the Emancipation
Proclamation,
the end of the invasion of Kentucky: Perryville, northern
Mississippi:
Iuka and Corinth, central Tennessee: Stone's River.
B. Select Bibliography.
Belz, Herman. A New Birth of Freedom: The
Republican
party and Freedmen's Rights, 1861-1866
(1976).
Blight, David W. Frederick Douglass, Civil War:
Keeping Faith in Jubilee (1989).
Cox, LaWanda. Lincoln and Black Freedom (1981).
Cozzens, Peter. The Battle of Stones River:
No Better Place To Die (1990).
Engle, Stephen D. Don Carlos Buell : Most
Promising
of All (1999).
Foner, Eric. Nothing but Freedom: Emancipation and Its Legacy (1983).
Franklin, John H. The Emancipation Proclamation
(1963).
Gerteis, Louis S. From Contraband to Freedman:
Federal Policy toward Southern Blacks,
1861-1865 (1973).
Hafendorfer, Kenneth A. Perryville, Battle for
Kentucky (2nd ed., rev.; 1992).
Hallock, Judith Lee. Braxton Bragg and Confederate Defeat (Vol. 2,
1991).
Jones, Archer. Confederate Strategy from Shiloh
to Vicksburg (1961).
McDonough, James Lee. Stones River--Bloody Winter
in Tennessee (1980).
Murfin, James V. The Gleam of Bayonets (1965).
Nieman, Donald G. To Set the Law in Motion: The Freedmen's Bureau and
Legal Rights for Blacks,
1865-1869 (1979).
Nolan, Alan T. The Iron Brigade (1961).
Sears, Stephen. Landscape Turned Red, the Battle
of Antietam (1983).
XIII. Winter Failures and Summer Turning
Points:
From Fredericksburg to Vicksburg.
A. Topics:
The Fredericksburg Campaign, Ambrose E. Burnside, Chancellorsville,
"Fighting
Joe" Hooker, R.E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, the Gettysburg Campaign, John
Buford, George G. Meade, Jeb Stuart, James "Pete" Longstreet,
Vicksburg,
U. S. Grant, William T. Sherman, John C. Pemberton.
B. Selected Bibliography.
Catton, Bruce. Gettysburg: The Final Fury (1974).
Catton, Bruce. Glory Road (1952).
Cleaves, Freeman. Meade of Gettysburg (1960).
Coddington, Edwin B. The Gettysburg Campaign
(1968).
Conklin, E.R. The Women of Gettysburg (1993).
Cunningham, Edward. The Port Hudson Campaign,
1862-1863 (1963).
Downey, Fairfax. Clash of Cavalry: The
Battle of Brandy Station, June 9, 1863 (1959).
Gallagher, Gary W. The Third Day at Gettysburg and Beyond (1994).
Hassler, Warren W., Jr. Crisis at the
Crossroads:
The First Day at Gettysburg (1970).
Hoehling, A.A. Vicksburg: Forty-Seven Days
of Siege (1969).
Matthews, Gary Robert. Basil Wilson Duke, CSA (2005).
Miers, E.S. Web of Victory: Grant at
Vicksburg
(1955).
Osborne, Charles C. Jubal: The Life and Times of General Jubal A.
Early,
C.S.A., Defender of the
Lost Cause (1992).
Pfanz, Harry W. Gettysburg--Culp's Hill and Cemetery Hill (1993).
Pfanz, Harry W. Gettysburg: The Second Day (1987).
Piston, William Garrett. Lee's Tarnished Lieutenant: James Longstreet
and His Place in Southern
History (1987).
Robertson, James I. The Stonewall Brigade (1963).
Sears, Stephen W. Chancellorsville (1996).
Stewart, George R. Pickett's Charge (1959).
Tucker, Glenn. Lee and Longstreet at Gettysburg
(1968).
Wheeler, Richard. The Siege of Vicksburg (1978).
XIV. The Southern Debacle.
A. Topics:
Jefferson Davis, State Rights, food, industry, finance, disloyalty,
class
strife, southern blacks, southern diplomacy.
B. Select Bibliography.
Ash, Stephen V. When the Yankees Came: Conflict
and Chaos in the Occupied South (1995).
Ball, Douglas B. Financial Failure and Confederate Defeat (1991).
Barrett, James G. The Civil War in North Carolina
(1953).
Beals, Carlton. War Within A War: The
Confederacy
Against Itself (1965).
Escott, Paul. After Secession: Jefferson Davis
and the failure of Southern Nationalism (1978).
Faust, Drew Gilpin. Mothers of Invention: Women of the Slaveholding
South in the American Civil
War (1966).
Lonn, Ella. Salt as A Factor in the Confederacy
(1933).
Massey, Mary E. Bonnet Brigades: American Women
and the Civil War (1966).
Massey, Mary E. Ersatz in the Confederacy (1952).
Massey, Mary E. Refugee Life in the Confederacy
(1964).
Muhlenfeld, Elisabeth. Mary Boykin Chesnut (1981).
Myers, Robert M., ed. The Children of
Pride:
A True Story of Georgia and the Civil War (1972).
Neely, Mark, Jr. Southern Rights: Political
Prisoners
and the Myth of Confederate Constitutionalism (1999).
Owsley, Frank L. State Rights in the Confederacy
(1925).
Rable, George C. Civil Wars: Women and the Crisis
of Southern Nationalism (1989).
Rable, George C. The Confederate Republic: A
Revolution against Politics (1994).
Rogers, William Warren. Confederate Home Front:
Montgomery During the Civil War (1999).
Scarborough, Ruth. Belle Boyd: Siren of the South
(1983).
Symonds, Craig L. Stonewall of the West: Patrick Cleburne and the Civil
War (1997).
Thomas, Emory M. The Confederacy as a
Revolutionary
Experiment (1970).
Thomas, Emory M. The Confederate Nation,
1861-1865
(1979).
Vandiver, Frank. Their Tattered Flags (1970).
White, Christine Schultz and Benton R. White. Now the Wolf Has Come:
The Creek Nation in the
Civil War (1996).
Whites, Lee Ann The Civil War As a Crisis of Gender: Augusta, Georgia,
1860-1890 (1995).
Wiley, Bell I. The Plain People of the
Confederacy
(1943).
Wiley, Bell I. The Road to Appomattox (1956).
Woodward, C. Vann. Mary Chesnut's Civil War
(1981).
Woodworth, Steven E. Davis and Lee at War (1995).
Yearns, Wilfred B. The Confederate Congress
(1960).
XV. The Rise of Northern
Fortunes:
Chickamauga through Atlanta.
A. Topics:
Morgan's Ohio Raid, northern cavalry, U.S. Grant, the
Chickamauga-Chattanooga
Campaigns, William S. Rosecrans, Ambrose E. Burnside, James Longstreet,
George H. Thomas, William T. Sherman, the Wilderness, Spotsylvania,
North
Anna, Bethesda Church, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Ben Butler, stalemate,
Jubal Early, the "mine," the Atlanta Campaign, Joseph E. Johnston, John
Bell Hood, the battle for Atlanta, stalemate.
B. Select Bibliography.
Bearss, Edwin C. Forrest at Brice's Cross
Roads:
And in North Mississippi in 1864 (1979).
Brice, Marshall M. Conquest of a Valley (1965).
Carter, Samuel III. The Last Cavaliers:
Confederate and Union Cavalry in the Civil War (1979).
Castel, Albert. Decision in the West: The Atlanta
Campaign of 1864 (1992).
Cleaves, Freeman. Rock of Chickamauga:
The Life of George H. Thomas (1948).
Cozzens, Peter. The Shipwreck of their Hopes: The Battles of
Chattanooga
(1996).
Cozzens, Peter. This Terrible Sound: The Battle of Chickamauga (1996).
Davis, William C. The Battle of New Market (1975).
Davis, William C., ed. Diary of a Confederate Soldier: John S. Jackman
of the Orphan Brigade
(1990).
Davis, William C. The Orphan Brigade: The Kentucky Confederates Who
Couldn't Go Home
(1980).
Gallagher, Gary W. The Wilderness Campaign (1997).
Govan, Gilbert E. and Livinggood, James W. A
Different Valor: The Story of General Joseph E.
Johnston, C. S. A. (1956).
Lamers, William M. The Edge of Glory: A
Biography of General William S. Rosecrans, U. S. A.
(1961).
Lewis, Lloyd. Sherman, Fighting Prophet (1932).
Liddell Hart, B.H. Sherman: Soldier,
Realist,
American (1929).
Longacre, Edward G. Mounted Raids of the Civil
War (1975).
Martin, Samuel J. "Kill-Cavalry": Sherman's Merchant of Terror: The
Life of Union General Hugh
Judson Kilpatrick (1996).
McDonough, James Lee. Chattanooga: A Death Grip on the Confederacy
(1984).
Sherman, William T. Memoirs of General W. T.
Sherman, Written by Himself (2 vols., 1887).
McDonough, James Lee. Chattanooga: A Death
Grip on the Confederacy (1984).
Miers, E. S. The Last Campaign: Grant Saves
the Union (1972).
Nash, Howard P. Stormy Petrel: The Life
and Times of General Benjamin F. Butler, 1818-1893
(1969).
Philips, Edward H. The Shenandoah Valley in
1864:
An Episode in the History of Warfare
(1965).
Priest, John Michael. Victory Without Triumph: The Wilderness, May
6th and 7th, 1864 (1996).
Ramage, James A. Rebel Raider: The Life of General John Hunt Morgan
(1986).
Sommers, Richard J. Richmond Redeemed:
The Siege at Petersburg (1981).
Starr, Stephen Z. The Union Cavalry in the Civil
War (1979).
Thomas, Edison H. John Hunt Morgan and His
Raiders
(1975).
Tucker, Glenn. Chickamauga: Bloody Battle
in the West (1961).
Vandiver, Frank E. Jubal's Raid (1960).
Wise, Stephen R. Gate of Hell: Campaign for Charleston Harbor, 1863
(1994).
XVI. The North in Wartime.
A. Topics:
The economic situation, the Lincoln economic program, manufacturers,
railroad
promoters, speculators, bankers, financing the war, the national
banking
system, economic boom in the North, new industries and trends,
agriculture,
labor.
B. Select Bibliography.
Bensel, Richard Franklin. Yankee Leviathan: The
Origins of Central State Authority in America,
1859-1877 (1990).
Bernstein, Iver. The New York City Draft Riots
(1990).
Curry, Leonard P. Blueprint for Modern
America:
Non-Military Legislation of the First Civil War
Congress (1968).
Donald, David H. Lincoln (1997).
Fite, Emerson D. Social and Industrial Conditions
in the North during the Civil War (1910).
Gallman, Matthew J. The North Fights the Civil War (1994).
Geary, James W. We Need Men: The Union Draft
in the Civil War (1991).
Gilchrist, David T. and Lewis, W. David, eds.
Economic Change in the Civil War (1965).
Larson, Harrietta M. Jay Cooke (1936).
Leonard, Elizabeth D. Yankee Women: Gender
Battles
in the Civil War (1994).
McCague, James. Moguls and Iron Men: The
Story of the First Transcontinental Railroad (1964).
Neely, Mark E., Jr. The Fate of Liberty: Abraham
Lincoln and the Promise of America (1991).
Niven, John. Salmon P. Chase: A Biography (1995).
Paludin, Phillip Shaw. The Presidency of Abraham
Lincoln (1994).
Rein, Bert W. An Analysis and Critique of the
Union Financing of the Civil War (1962).
Silbey, Joel. A Respectable Minority: The
Democratic
Party in the Civil War Era (1977).
Vinovskis, Maris A., ed. Toward A Social History of the American Civil
War: Exploratory Essays
(1990).
Voegeli, V. Jacque. Free but Not Equal: The Midwest and the negro
during
the Civil War (1967).
XVII. The Effects of the War on Northern
Culture
and Politics.
A. Topics: The
effect of business on the Northern mind, the common people, prison
psychology,
wartime Republican factionalism, the election of 1864, peace
negotiations,
the capture of Atlanta.
B. Select Bibliography.
Andrews, J. Cutler. The North Reports the Civil
War
(1955).
DuBois, Ellen. Feminism and Suffrage: The
Emergence
of an Independent Women's Movement in
America, 1848-1869 (1978).
Frederickson, George M. The Inner Civil
War:
Northern Intellectuals and the Crisis of the Union
(1965).
Freidel, Frank, ed. Union Pamphlets of the Civil
War (2 vols., 1967).
Gallman, J. Matthew. The North Fights the Civil
War: The Home Front (1994).
Nelson, Larry E. Bullets, Ballots, and
Rhetoric:
Confederate Policy for the United States
Presidential Contest of 1864
(1980).
Marvel, William. Andersonville: The Last Depot (1994).
Mitchell, Reid. The Vacant Chair: The Northern
Soldier Leaves Home (1993).
Rose, Anne C. Victorian America and the Civil
War (1992).
Smith, George W. and Judah, Charles, eds. Life
in the North during the Civil War: A Source of
History (1966).
Venet, Wendy Hammond. Neither Ballots Nor
Bullets:
Women Abolitionists and the Civil War
(1991).
XVIII. The Civil War Ends.
A. Topics:
Hood's invasion of Tennessee, the "March to the Sea," Carolinas
Campaign,
evacuation of Richmond, the Confederates surrender.
B. Select Bibliography.
Bradley, Mark L. Last Stand in the Carolinas: The Battle of Bentonville
(1996).
Barney, William L. Flawed Victory: A New
Perspective on the Civil War (1975).
Barrett, John G. Sherman's March Through the
Carolinas (1956).
Davis, Burke. To Appomattox: Nine April
Days, 1865 (1959).
Dowdey, Clifford. Lee's Last Campaign (1960).
Glatthaar, Joseph T. The March to the Sea and
Beyond: Sherman's Troops in the Savannah and
Carolinas Campaigns (1985).
Horn, S.F. The Decisive Battle of Nashville
(1956).
Hughes, Nathaniel Cheairs, Jr., Bentonville: The Final Battle of
Sherman
and Johnston (1996).
Lucas, Marion Brunson. Sherman and the Burning
of Columbia (1976).
Luvaas, Jay. The Military Legacy of the Civil
War (1959).
Marvel, William. Lee's Last Retreat: The Flight
to Appomattox (2002).
Patrick, Rembert W. The Fall of Richmond (1960).
XIX. An Introduction to Reconstruction.
A. Topics:
Results of the war, the meaning of the war, the complexity of the
Reconstruction
problem.
B. Select Bibliography.
Bowers, Claude G. The Tragic Era: The
Revolution
After Lincoln (1929).
Carter, Hodding. The Angry Scar (1959).
Coulter, E. Merton. The South during
Reconstruction
1865-1877 1947).
Cox, LaWanda and John H. Politics, Principle, and Prejudice 1865-1866
(1963).
Dunning, William A. Reconstruction, Political
and Economic, 1865-1877 (1907).
Egerton, John. The Americanization of Dixie:
the Southernization of America (1974).
Fleming, Walter L. The Sequel of
Appomattox:
A Chronicle of the Reunion of the States (1919).
Franklin, John H. Reconstruction after the Civil
War (1961).
Henry, Robert S. The Story of Reconstruction
(1938).
Perman, Michael. Reunion without Compromise: The South and
Reconstruction,
1865-1868
(1973).
Peterson, Merrill D. Lincoln in American Memory (1994).
Silber, Nina. The Romance of Reunion: Northerners
and the South, 1865-1900 (1993).
Simpson, Lewis P. Mind and the American Civil War: A Meditation on
Lost Causes (1989).
Stampp, Kenneth M. The Era of Reconstruction,
1865-1877 (1965).
Wallace, David Duncan. South Carolina: A Short History, 1520-1948
(1951).
Wiltse, Charles Maurice. The Jeffersonian Tradition in American
Democracy
(1960).
Woodward, C. Vann. The Burden of Southern History (1960).
XX. Presidential Reconstruction.
A. Topics:
Reaction to the end of the war, Reconstruction under Lincoln, the 10%
plan,
Lincoln's motives, Radical opposition, motives of the Radicals,
Johnson's
plan of Reconstruction, Congressional reaction to Johnson, 1866 Civil
Rights
Bill, mid-term election of 1866.
B. Select Bibliography.
Beale, Howard K. The Critical Year: A Study
of Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction (1958).
Belz, Herman. Emancipation and Equal Rights: Politics and
Constitutionalism
in the Civil War Era
(1978).
Belz, Herman. Reconstructing the Union: Theory and Policy During the
Civil War (1969).
Brock, William R. An American Crisis (1963).
Carter, Dan T. When the War was Over: The
Failure of Self-Reconstruction in the South
1865-1867 (1985).
Donald, David. The politics of Reconstruction,
1863-1867 (1965).
Gillette, William.
The Right to Vote: Politics and the Passage
of the Fifteenth Amendment (1969).
Hesseltine, William B. Lincoln's Plan of
Reconstruction
(1960).
Hyman, Harold. Era of the Oath (1954).
Sefton, James E. Andrew Johnson and the Uses
of Constitutional Power (1980).
Trefousse, Hans L. Andrew Johnson: A
Biography
(1989).
XXI. Congressional Reconstruction.
A. Topics:
Congressional Reconstruction acts, the admission of states, the
radicals
and the executive, the radicals and the supreme court, the election of
1868.
B. Select Bibliography.
Abbott, Richard H. The Republican Party and the South, 1855-1877
(1986).
Brodie, Fawn. Thaddeus Stevens (1959).
Coleman, Charles H. The Election of 1868 (1933).
Current, Richard. Old Thad Stevens (1942).
Dearing, Mary R. Veterans in Politics:
The Story of the G. A. R. (1952).
McKitrick, Eric. Andrew Johnson and
Reconstruction
(1960).
Sefton, James E. The United States Army and
Reconstruction,
1865-1867 (1967).
Seip, Terry L. The South Returns to
Congress:
Men, Economic Measures and Intersectional
Relationships, 1868-1879
(1983).
Trefousse, Hans. The Radical Republicans: Lincoln's Vanguard for Racial
Justice (1969).
Trefousse, Hans. Thaddeus Stevens: Nineteenth Century Egalitarian
(1997).
XXII. Reconstruction in the South:
The
Radical Governments.
A. Topics:
Characteristics of the radical governments, the KKK, the end of
Reconstruction,
economic Reconstruction, the social effects of Reconstruction,
conclusions.
B. Select Bibliography.
Ash, Stephen V. When the Yankees Came: Conflict and Chaos in the
Occupied
South, 1861-1865
(1995).
Bentley, George R. A History of the Freedman's
Bureau (1955).
Berlin, Ira, et al. The Black Military Experience (1982-).
Berlin, Ira, et al. The Destruction of Slavery (1985-).
Butchart, Ronald E. Northern Schools, Southern
Blacks, and Reconstruction: Freedmen's Education, 1862-1875
(1980).
Connelly, Thomas L. and Bellows, Barbara. God
and General Longstreet: The Lost Cause and the Southern Mind (1982).
Current, Richard N. Those Terrible Carpetbaggers:
A Reinterpretation (1988).
DuBois, W.E.B. Black Reconstruction in America,
1860-1880 (1935).
Fitzgerald, Michael W. The Union League Movement
in the South (1989).
Fleming, Walter. The Freedman's Savings Bank
(1927).
Foner, Eric. Nothing but Freedom: Emancipation and its Legacy (1983).
Foner, Eric. Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877
(1988).
Gillette, William. Retreat from Reconstruction, 1869-1879 (1979).
Hahn, Steven. The Roots of Southern Populism: Yeoman Farmers and the
Transformation of the
Georgia Upcountry, 1850-1890 (1983).
Harris, William C. The Day of the Carpetbagger: Republican
Reconstruction
in Mississippi (1979).
Haworth, Paul L. The Hayes-Tilden Disputed
Presidential
Election of 1876 (1906).
Hirshson, Stanley P. Farewell to the bloody
shirt;
northern Republicans & the southern Negro, 1877-1893 (168).
Horn, S.F. Invisible Empire: The Story
of the Ku Klux Klan, 1866-1871 (1939).
Mitchell, Broadus and George S. Mitchell. The
Industrial Revolution in the South (1930).
Moore, James T. "Redeemers Reconsidered: Change and Continuity in the
Democratic South,
1877-1900." Journal of Southern History 64 (1978):
357-78.
Litwack, Leon. Been in the Storm So Long: The Aftermath of Slavery
(1979).
Perman, Michael. The Road to Redemption:
Southern Politics, 1869-1879 (1984).
Rabinowitz, Howard N., ed. Southern Black Leaders
of the Reconstruction Era (1982).
Rable, George C. But There Was No Peace: Violence
and Reconstruction (1984).
Randel, William P. The Ku Klux Klan: A
Century of Infamy (1965).
Robinson, Armstead L. "Beyond the Realm of Social Consensus: New
Meanings
of Reconstruction
for American History." Journal of American History
68 (1981): 276-97.
Singletary, Otis A. Negro Militia and
Reconstruction
(1957).
Smith, Samuel D. The Negroes in Congress,
1870-1901
(1940).
Stover, John F. The Railroads of the South,
1865-1900
(1955).
Swint, Henry L. The Northern Teacher in the
South,
1862-1870 (1941).
Taylor, A.A. The Negro in Tennessee, 1865-1880
(1941).
Trelease, Allen W. White Terror: The Ku Klux Conspiracy and
Reconstruction
(1982).
Wharton, Vernon L. The Negro in Mississippi,
1865-1890 (1947).
Williamson, Joel. After Slavery: The Negro
in South Carolina during Reconstruction, 1861-1877 (1965).
Williamson, Joel. New People: Miscegenation
and Mulattoes in the United States (1980).
Wilson, Theodore B. The Black Codes of the South
(1965).
Woodward, C. Vann. Reunion and Reaction:
The Compromise of 1877 and the end of Reconstruction (1951).
Woodward, C. Vann. The Strange Career of Jim
Crow (1966).
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"War is Hell" No More
Sherman in 1877
