Columbiad: A Quarterly Review of the War Between The States |
Volume
1, Number 3 |
Fall
1997 |
Page
5 Page
7 Page
8 Page
13 Page
23 A comparison with a classic military work suggests McClellan's strategy may have been a well-reasoned effort to win without opening the floodgates of "total war". Page
38 Robert E. Lee would have stood in awe of his most single-minded biographer. Page
54 For a Union admiral to cooperate willingly and cheerfully with the army was unheard of; at Vicksburg, it was the key to success. Page
63 Old soldiers' memories, the changing face of a battlefield, and the work of historians clashed and mingled as Americans struggled to interpret Pickett's Charge fifty years after it happened. Page
93 General David E. Twiggs surrendered a huge amount of Federal property in Texas on the eve of the Civil War. Did he have any other choice? Page
108 A search through the primary sources identifies the mind behind the first ship of the modern navy: the C.S.S. Virginia. Page
127 Unfairly branded as slackers after an 1864 engagement in the Shenandoah Valley, a group of Confederates from east Tennessee finally gets its due. Page
141
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