This book will appeal to anyone interested in the western theater of the Civil War, soldier life, or Indiana history. Durham's memoir is a well-written and detailed account of his experiences as both
Confederate General John Bell Hood led the July 1864 Battle of Peach Tree Creek, near Atlanta, Georgia. According to the author, the South’s loss marked the beginning of the end for the Confederacy. O
Roger Williams (1604-1683) was educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge and ordained in the Church of England. In 1630, he sailed for North America in search of religious liberty. Finding the same reli
Pivoting on ideas in Paul Rahe's 1992 Republics Ancient and Modern, political scientists explore some of the enduring dilemmas of popular government and some of the changing solutions favored throu
William Ross Stilwell was wed to Mary Fletcher Speer (known as Molly) on 8 September 1859 in McDonough, Georgia, in Henry County. William was twenty and Molly was eighteen. Having moved to northwester
Popular food writer Fred Sauceman searched Southern Appalachia for the tastes that define and sustain the region's people. What he found will delight readers who join him on this journey. This second
Davis (family and regional history, Wallace State Community College, Alabama) explores some of the most controversial questions that have emerged from earlier studies of Camp Sumter, the infamous Conf