Posted in Women and Gender

A South Carolina Lady on the Death of the Confederacy: “Our slain heroes cried out against such an end”

Emma Holmes was a twenty-two year old woman when the Civil War began. The scion of a well-connected Charleston family, she had rejoiced when the…

Continue Reading A South Carolina Lady on the Death of the Confederacy: “Our slain heroes cried out against such an end”
Posted in Civil War Memory of Reconstruction Monuments USCT

Marker Erected Telling the Story of USCT at the Battle of Nashville

Before the December 2021 anniversary of the Union victory at the Battle of Nashville, a marker was erected near the site of Granbury’s Lunette telling…

Continue Reading Marker Erected Telling the Story of USCT at the Battle of Nashville
Posted in Dunning School Lost Cause Memory of Reconstruction

The New Attack on W.E.B. DuBois Is Very Much the Same Old Attack

W.E.B. DuBois was already getting a lot of attention last year because of his association with Critical Race Theory. The fact that he has been…

Continue Reading The New Attack on W.E.B. DuBois Is Very Much the Same Old Attack
Posted in Civil War Memory of Reconstruction

2022 Is the 160th Anniversary of the 1862 Wilmington, N.C. Yellow Fever Outbreak

In 1862, Wilmington, North Carolina was hit with a Yellow Fever epidemic that caused half the city’s population to flee. While the disease outbreak seems…

Continue Reading 2022 Is the 160th Anniversary of the 1862 Wilmington, N.C. Yellow Fever Outbreak
Posted in Civil War End of War Foreign Policy U.S. Grant White Terror

June 1865 Ulysses S. Grant Worried that Confederates Fleeing to Mexico Posed Threat to U.S.

Following the complete defeat of the Confederacy in 1865, thousands of Confederate veterans, politicians, and their family members fled to Latin America. Most of these…

Continue Reading June 1865 Ulysses S. Grant Worried that Confederates Fleeing to Mexico Posed Threat to U.S.
Posted in Book Reviews

Around the Web January 2022: Best of Civil War & Reconstruction Blogs and Social Media

This month was a good one for podcasts and video. Happy New Year! Blogs Civil War Books and Authors handed out its annual awards for…

Continue Reading Around the Web January 2022: Best of Civil War & Reconstruction Blogs and Social Media
Posted in Civil War Monuments

Podcast Examines How Civil War Is Remembered at Battlefields and in Monuments

Laura DeMarco discusses her new book “Lost Civil War: The Disappearing Legacy of America’s Greatest Conflict” and Karen Cox, professor at the University of North…

Continue Reading Podcast Examines How Civil War Is Remembered at Battlefields and in Monuments
Posted in Civil War Memory of Reconstruction Monuments

Abolitionist Turner Ashby’s Mob Drove Out Subject of New Virginia Marker

In 1856, future Confederate hero Turner Ashby led a violent pro-slavery mob in an attack against John C. Underwood, of Clarke County, Virginia. Underwood was…

Continue Reading Abolitionist Turner Ashby’s Mob Drove Out Subject of New Virginia Marker
Posted in Civil War USCT

New Civil War Trails Interpretive Panel at Camp Stanton, Md. Where USCT Trained

Civil War Trails has installed a new interpretive panel Civil at Serenity Farm near Benedict, Maryland on a site where African Americans trained in the…

Continue Reading New Civil War Trails Interpretive Panel at Camp Stanton, Md. Where USCT Trained
Posted in Civil War Memory of Reconstruction Monuments Religion

Virginia Approves New Historic Markers Highlighting Civil War & Reconstruction History

The Virginia Board of Historic Resources approved fourteen new highway historic markers at its quarterly meeting in December. The markers are expected to go up…

Continue Reading Virginia Approves New Historic Markers Highlighting Civil War & Reconstruction History