Southern History Series: How The Union Perished
In the late antebellum era, a group of Southern intellectuals created a new vision for the South
In the late antebellum era, a group of Southern intellectuals created a new vision for the South
The Boogaloo has become a catchphrase for Civil War 2
Andrew Jackson, the Democratic Party and illiberal democracy
A book review of Eric Foner’s The Second Founding: How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution
America’s first experiment with integration was struck down by the Supreme Court
A refutation of Greg Johnson and his White Nationalist ideology
A brief account of the settlement of the American South and how the Southern people are the unique byproduct of their blood, culture and natural environment
Violent accelerationism has to come from the Left to work
Mainstream conservatism doesn’t really have a past
The South believed in a hierarchical order of inequality
During the War Between the States, the North and South each sought deliverance from the opposing side
The modern cuckservative is the “idiot” of Antiquity
The Comanches were once the terror of the American West
A book review of Jack Bass and W. Scott Poole’s The Palmetto State: The Making of Modern South Carolina.
What did the Confederates really believe about race?
Slavery had a bright future in Texas in 1861
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
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
West Virginia was occupied by the Union Army and illegally torn from Virginia by a cabal in Wheeling
Changing demographics thwarted secession in Missouri
Itta Bena, a town of 1,828 people in the Mississippi Delta, has become a banking desert
Reconstruction Mississippi was the saddest and the blackest tyranny that ever cursed this earth
Antebellum Kentuckians saw slavery as a curse that was being naturally drained away by the hand of Providence
Kentuckians spilled over their borders and colonized neighboring states
The Eufaula Regency spearhearded the secession movement in Southeast Alabama
In his Third Annual Message to Congress, President Andrew Johnson denounced the Radical Republican plan for Congressional Reconstruction
In February 1861, Unionists and Southern Nationalists held dueling torchlight parades through Memphis
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