Civil War Memory

Reflections of a High School History Teacher & Civil War Historian

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Civil War Blogs

A. Lincoln Blog

A People’s Contest

Army of Tennessee

Bull Runnings

Cenantua’s Blog

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Civil War Bookshelf

Civil War Navy

Civil Warriors

Dead Confederates

Draw the Sword

Gettysburg Daily

Lincoln Studies

Milestone Documents

My Old Confederate Home

My Year of Living Rangerously

Mysteries and Conundrums (John Hennessy, et. al.)

of Battlefields and Bibliophiles

Our “Federal” Union, Must It Be Preserved?

President Lincoln’s Cottage

Rantings of a Civil War Historian

Renegade South

Sesquicentennial Madness

Shenandoah 1864

The 48th Pennsylvania

The Maryland Campaign of 1862

The Sable Arm

The Trans-Mississippian

UVA Special Collections Blogs

Wayne Hsieh

History Blogs and Other Attractions

AHA Blog

Airminded

American History Now

Blog Them Out of the Stone Age

Boston 1775

Easily Distracted

Edge of the American West

Found History

Fredericksburg Remembered

History is Elementary

History News Network

Jacksonian America

Jefferson Today

Lawyers, Guns, and Money

Northwest History

Offprints

Past in the Present

Prof Hacker

Religion and American History

Random Thoughs on History

Shorpy

The Historical Society

The Shockoe Examiner

Transatlantic History

Vast Public Indifference

Virginia Historical Society Blog

Walking the Berkshires

Click here for more history blogs than you will know what to do with.

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Welcome to Civil War Memory. I blog about issues at the intersection of historical memory, Civil War historiography, public history, and the teaching of history on the high school level. [Read More…]

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Recent Posts

  • A Pension For a Vote
  • Mac Wycoff on Richard Kirkland
  • The National Park Service’s Black Confederates
  • John Tenniel’s Black Confederate
  • Civil Warriors
  • Ann DeWitt Responds (well, sort of)
  • What Does Your Classroom’s Seating Arrangement Reflect?
  • “Ground Zero,” Civil War Memory, and Contested Landscapes
  • “Hurrah! for Massa Linkum”
  • Digging for the Truth

Popular Posts

  • The Future of the Confederate Flag

    My recent post on the unveiling of another large Confederate flag in Tennessee generated a number of comments.  It’s an emotional issue on all sides and it is unlikely that the interested parties will ever fully agree on whether it should be displayed in public as well as its meaning.  But that’s the way it

    75 Comments — 13816 Views — June 11, 2009

  • Is the Richard Kirkland Story True?

    The following guest post by Michael Schaffner examines the wartime evidence for the Kirkland story.  It is a thoroughly researched essay and is well worth your time.  I should point out that Mr. Schaffner did not set out to write a piece debunking this particular story.  Like many of us he was curious about the

    38 Comments — 7817 Views — December 22, 2009

  • Nat Turner Lived 40 Miles From the Crater

    I‘ve been thinking quite a bit about the images of slave rebellions and miscegenation that shaped the world view of white Southerners throughout the antebellum period.  In the case of Nat Turner’s Rebellion newspapers throughout Virginia and beyond offered extensive coverage and attempted to offer an explanation that would assuage the concerns of what white

    17 Comments — 7364 Views — June 26, 2009

  • Family Fun With Abraham Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth

    [Hat-Tip to Steve West] How would you like to attend a reenactment of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. On March 7 the Sovereign Majestic Theater in Pottsville, Pennsylvania will be transformed into Ford’s Theater. Booth will be played by Charles Sacavage, a retired Pottsville Area School District history teacher who now teaches history part-time at Alvernia

    18 Comments — 6842 Views — February 25, 2009

  • Patrick Cleburne and Black Confederates Take Hollywood

    [Hat-Tip to Lee White] Back in 2008 I commented on a graphic novel that tells the story of Patrick Cleburne’s plan to arm slaves in exchange for their freedom.  I expressed a number of concerns in that post and I appreciate the author of the novel for offering his own perspective.  Now it looks like that

    75 Comments — 5665 Views — February 5, 2010

Random Posts

  • Richmond Newspapers Assess the Crater

    The Richmond Dispatch included a great deal of commentary that referenced the presence of black soldiers in the battle to both warn its readers of possible dangers and as a means to maintain support for the war effort.  By including such detail readers on the home front were made aware of the dangers that black

    9 Comments — 260 Views — June 30, 2009

  • Roger Wilkins Reviews Arsenault’s Freedom Riders

    This is a massive study of the Freedom Rides of 1961 by Raymond Arsenault who teaches history at the University of South Florida. Just by chance I had dinner with Professor Arsenault a few years back at a conference in Atlanta, Georgia. Along with two other historians we ate at a Sports Bar right across

    0 Comments — 55 Views — January 14, 2006

  • Embracing Lincoln in the South

    Looks like Abraham Lincoln is getting more attention in the “Confederate South” during his bicentennial than both Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee combined.  Well, before you run for the hills complaining about revisionism remember that Lincoln had strong ties to the South that extended beyond the Civil War.  In a recent interview on C-SPAN,

    13 Comments — 548 Views — January 27, 2009

  • Remembering Lt. Stephen Atkins Swails

    Unfortunately we don’t see this particular image often enough.  If a black Civil War soldier makes the news it is usually the result of an SCV chapter trying to make a point about loyal black Confederates.   Well, perhaps a few happened to find themselves on the front lines given that thousands of black slaves

    1 Comments — 117 Views — November 2, 2006

  • Update on Lee Commemoration

    Looks like the commission in charge of commemorating Robert E. Lee’s 200th birthday is hard at work putting together a program that will do justice to the history that he helped shape. From the Richmond Times-Dispatch: The commission’s co-chairman, Del. Benjamin L. Cline, R-Rockbridge, described Lee “as a man who contributed so much to the heritage

    0 Comments — 49 Views — January 20, 2006

Recent Comments

  • Andy Hall: Meant to have a big block quote in the middle of that.
  • Dick Stanley: Well, of course they’d be upset about Obamacare, etc. They’re conservatives, by definition. Albeit a rather unusual...
  • Andy Hall: Dunno, but parents who home-school are absolutely the intended audience. From the advertisement:There is no question that the youth of...
  • Corey Meyer: I wonder what the % of kids there are homeschooled? Sorry if this bring your buddy Richard Williams into this discussion.
  • Kevin Levin: You are absolutely right.
  • Andy Hall: Amen. I’d only add, though, that I’m increasingly convinced that among the hard-core Southern Heritage™ types, it’s...
  • Kevin Levin: I am not surprised at all by the results of that survey. Somehow we’ve been seduced into thinking that our students understand...
  • Ken Noe: Professor Guelzo: Thanks from me too for joining the conversation. I wouldn’t say that I’m entirely hopeful about digital...
  • Allen C. Guelzo: I’m drawing a distinction between retreival and learning along lines parallel to the kid in our classes who knows what the...
  • Kevin Levin: Professor Guelzo, Glad to see that you’ve found your way to Civil War Memory and thanks for following up with this comment....

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