Columbiad: A Quarterly Review of the War Between The States |
Volume
1, Number 2 |
Summer
1997 |
Page
5 Page
7 Page
11 Page
21 The Southern pantry became a theater of war as food shortages crippled the Confederacy's ability to sustain itself. Page
31 In this excerpt from his forthcoming book, the author asserts that what the Union really won at Vicksburg was a general who could win the war in the East. Page
42 A state historical society has made a priceless contribution to our knowledge of a matchless group of soldiers. Page
55 Our mental image of Jackson has been shaped by the huge volume of portraiture the publicity-shunning general inspired. Page
73 Recent efforts to discern Robert E. Lee's fundamental strategic thinking have their merits, but are they right? Page
86 Army regulations said only ordained ministers could be chaplains. But one Philadelphia regiment insisted on a change. Page
93 Dan Sickles might have kept his leg and won a better place in history if he had looked more carefully at the terrain around him in the Battle of Gettysburg. Page
107 As Illinois prepared for war, some of her men headed south to fight against the North--at the urging, they said, of a prominent Union general. Page
122 Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War changed the American republic forever. In this provocative essay, the author considers how America changed, how Lincoln effected that change, and why he did so. Page
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