Book of the Week


Confederate Minds: The Struggle for Intellectual Independence in the Civil War South
by Michael T. Bernath

Now available in paperback, hardcover, & e-book

"Finally puts to rest the notion that the Confederacy was an intellectual wasteland and that Confederates had nothing to say aside from their rebel yell."
--Journal of American History
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Video: Mark E. Neely Jr. on the advantage of the U.S. Constitution during the Civil War

“Because the Civil War, by chance, began right at the beginning of an administration, that part of the Constitution that gave the president a four-year term and made the president the commander-in-chief was extremely important. That meant that, barring impeachment or assassination, there would be a determined Republican in the White House fighting the South until March of 1865.”—Mark E. Neely Jr. [...]

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Mark E. Neely Jr: Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation – An Excerpt

NEELY

Much has been lost by this failure to consider both of the American constitutions in the Civil War. Since the constitutions were markedly similar in content, the historian has the opportunity to see the document tested in two different societies at the same time. The opportunity for comparisons is unequaled in history. And ultimately our judgments on the role of the Constitution in war should appear doubly sound. [...]

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Video: Mark Neely on the North’s Two-Party System

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Mark Neely discusses whether the two-party system was an advantage for the North. [...]

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