YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Strategy and Weapons in the American Civil War
Essays 361 - 390
have any solid answer. The following paper examines reasons why the South lost, and focuses on the fact that it likely lost due to...
assistance from the government. Another problem involving the land was the fact that aristocrats were buying up large tracts and ...
lived simply, many people were middle class as well. In the South the focus was on plantations, farming, and the people were essen...
based on the regiments history, was a success and may indicate more greater in future. The student is facing a significant amount ...
Alfonso Heep is an educated Kentucky farmboy who, in agreement with his state government, originally wanted nothing to do with the...
had died, wrote letters to the families of other loved ones who died, and essentially came together in a very subtle way that defi...
states and what free states could join the Union in order to maintain a balance wherein slave states never had the upper hand it s...
of Yeoman Households" notes that in standard anti-bellum society, the white male plantation owner was the prime owner of everythin...
of unpleasant confrontations" (Clinton et al 140). For some of the Confederate women, war was distant, but for others, it ...
had been technically ended when the South lost the Civil War, the subsequent Reconstruction did nothing to reconstruct the concept...
deal to do with the fall of the South as well. The belief was that British debt holders that supported the South ended up taking t...
to the end of World War I. This was a war which affected the entire world. It was a war which centered on nationalistic ideolog...
USS Monitor is heralded as "the most famous of all American warships" largely because of its rotating turret, but in early March o...
Nor was it uncommon for these "belles" to become involved in politics, which would have been unheard of before the war (Clinton et...
of things that are rarely mentioned in classroom history books. Most history books portray the Union troops as kind, benevolent so...
was able to peacefully initiate change on a massive scale. As a leader, he was able to organize, and thus had the ability to unit...
citizens (DeLong, 1997). "The projects and politics of militarism and imperialism, of racial and cultural rivalries, of monopolie...
two armies would have simply pivoted around each other and ended up in each others rear, able to march unopposed to Washington or ...
record of communication between Semmes and his superiors. Boykin, in his Preface, also thanks the Alderman library at the Universi...
the North of "Confederate" pirates, it also provided more control for the blockade (McPherson, 370). Ship Island in New Orleans fo...
know that he was a slave and until he was old enough to experience the suffering and see the suffering endured by others. This ...
of self-preservation that had, up until that time, marked the soldiers of this war (McPherson 540). In short, though the Confedera...
the Lincoln administration was doing to the Confederacy (Archaimbault and Barnhart). The reason why the copperheads were f...
civilized nation. While historians blame Grants lackadaisical resolve to enforce Reconstruction laws, that slavery was ever sough...
Immigration Timeline, 2003). Many of the immigrants who came to the U.S. both prior to and after the Civil War did so out of comp...
The English Civil war was also not strictly English, involving as it did Ireland and Scotland as well. The conflict, in fact, orig...
itself with individual codes concerning conduct of certain individuals and groups. Morally, therefore each of the dilemmas noted ...
Missouri asked for admission to the Union in 1817. Because she was a slave state this caused considerable disagreement between th...
in colonial America and grew impressively after the Revolution, with ship production centering on the East River (NY Maritime Cult...
Each side was consistently successful in resolving its problems in politics, civil morale, and economics when its military was vic...