American History Series: Review: Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815
A book review of Gordon S. Wood’s Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815
A book review of Gordon S. Wood’s Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815
Who were the Founding Fathers? What did they believe?
A book review of Thomas and Debra Goodrich’s The Day Dixie Died: Southern Occupation, 1865-1866
A book review of William E. Parrish’s A History of Missouri, Volume III: 1860-1875
A book review of Karen F. McCarthy’s The Other Irish: The Scots-Irish Rascals Who Made America
Slavery, Civil War and the Politics of Identity in Missouri
A book review of Martin V. Melosi’s book The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Environment
Try this dish from the Alabama Gulf Coast
A book review of Melissa Walker and James C. Cobb’s The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Agriculture & Industry
A book review of Robert M. Weir’s Colonial South Carolina: A History
What would you like to see us explore next?
According to Gen. George McClellan, Maryland was poised to secede in 1861 and join the Confederacy
In the Dred Scott decision, Chief Justice Roger Taney methodically used history and law to explain why blacks are not American citizens and how the Constitution was written only for the European posterity of the Founders
The first blood spilled in the War Between the States was in Baltimore in 1861
The Battle of Blair Mountain in 1921 was quelled by the U.S. Army
West Virginia was occupied by the Union Army and illegally torn from Virginia by a cabal in Wheeling
West Virginia originally banned all blacks in its state constitution
Union General Thomas Ewing, Jr.’s General Order No.11 ethnically cleansed four counties in western Missouri
General Nathaniel Lyon launched a putsch that decapitated Missouri’s state government
Changing demographics thwarted secession in Missouri
2.5 million people left the Great Plains during the Dust Bowl and most went to California and Arizona
Just some folk music from the Upper South
Oklahoma used to be a stronghold of populism and socialism
Michael Cushman on the history and culture of the Lower South
The State of Sequoyah attempted to join the Union as an ethnostate for Native Americans. It was rejected.
Segregation was an international embarrassment for the American Empire during the Cold War
Northern Arkansas has a long history of racial violence and illiberalism
Gov. Jeff Davis was a populist who won the greatest landslide in Arkansas political history
Reconstruction Mississippi was the saddest and the blackest tyranny that ever cursed this earth
Ex-Confederate President Jefferson Davis was welcomed in Canada as a fallen hero
Mississippi had to secede from the Union to avoid becoming a blighted land cursed with free negro morals which would be a cesspool of vice, crime and infamy
Antebellum Kentuckians saw slavery as a curse that was being naturally drained away by the hand of Providence
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