Here’s what happened in April 1861, leading up to the firing on Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, which spurred the launch of the American Civil War.
Georgia Southern University history professor Brian K. Feltman, Ph.D., is creating a powerful exhibit titled “More than a ...
The Mill Creek Chapter, Georgia Society Sons of the American Revolution met recently and learned about the Meadow Gardens ...
At the Minnesota State Capitol, Howard Pyle’s Civil War painting “The Battle of Nashville” stands as a vivid tribute to ...
Seventy Black Union military members who fought in the Civil War will be memorialized in a monument planned for Rocky Mount ...
Richard Kreitner's "Fear No Pharoah" gives an honest account of how Jews resisted, ignored and even championed American ...
It is fascinating to note that, notwithstanding his antisemitism, Sherman was a great admirer of Rose Eytinge (1835-1911), a Jewish-American actress and author who rose to become one of the most popul ...
An effort is afoot to tell the story of the 1st South Carolina Volunteers in a six-acre park between Boundary Street and Battery Creek.
“Unity of Fields,” the recently rebranded group formerly known as Palestine Action US—the new name ... As with today’s civil terrorists, too, their rage was fueled by opposition to what they saw as an ...
The fighting of the American Civil War ultimately reached nearly every state in the Northern and Southern territories, with ...
The coordinated campaign to defy Brown v. Board continues to impact education today, as many schools remain racially ...
The Alien Enemies Act requires a president to declare the United States at war, giving him extraordinary powers to detain ...