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Pittsburgh Catholic (new)27 August 1864 (has links)
Includes information about coverage of Civil War battles and other Civil War news, a statue that will be erected of Christopher Columbus in Spain, Queen Victoria's address on England's stance at home and abroad, and two poems; one by Hon. T. D. M'Gee entitled "Jacques Cartier" and an anonymous one entitled "Encouragement."
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Pittsburgh Catholic (new)03 September 1864 (has links)
Includes information about a pastoral of Rev. Dr. Cullen, extensive coverage of Civil War news, letters, and correspondences, the Democratic Convention in Chicago nominating George B. McClellan for President of the United States, and a poem by Bernardus entitled "Hope - A Vision."
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Pittsburgh Catholic (new)03 December 1864 (has links)
Includes information about a history and description of the cathedral in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, employment opportunities for African Americans in Maryland, the prospect of religion in Demerara, and coverage of Civil War battles and news.
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Pittsburgh Catholic (new)24 June 1865 (has links)
Includes information about Governor Andrew Curtin of Pennsylvania calling on citizens to honor those recently returned from the Civil War, the farewell address of General Sherman to his army, and two anonymous poems entitled "The Christian Farmer" and "The Source of God."
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Pittsburgh Catholic (new)16 December 1865 (has links)
Includes information about Puseyism still being taught, new nuns taking their vows at the Convent Chapel of St. Xavier's in Latrobe, the dedication of the new church of the Transfiguration in Monongahela, President Andrew Johnson's policies of Reconstruction for the South, and a proclamation by President Andrew Johnson stating that the suspension of habeas corpus is over, except in some Southern states.
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Imagined families : Anglo-American kinship and the formation of Southern identity, 1830-1890Montgomery, Alison Skye January 2016 (has links)
Anglo-American kinship, as a set of historical continuities linking the United States to Great Britain and as a reckoning of relatedness, constituted a valuable cultural resource for Southerners as they contemplated their place within the American nation and outside in the nineteenth century. Like the more conventional calculations of consanguinity and familial belonging it referenced, the Anglo-American kinship was contingent, convoluted, and, not infrequently, contested. Articulated at various times by masters and former slaves, ministers and merchants, plantation mistresses and politicians, this sense of belonging to an imagined transatlantic family transcended the boundaries of gender, race, and class as readily as it traversed national borders. Though grounded in biogenetic factors, the language of Anglo-American kinship encompassed claims of belonging predicated on confessional faith, language, and institutions as well as blood. This thesis considers the interaction between conceptions of Anglo-American kinship and the formation of Southern national identity, both unionist and separatist, between 1830 and 1890 by examining institutions and social rituals that both inculcated filiopietism and constructed Southerness in the Civil War era and beyond. The subjects under consideration in this study include the role of European travel in forging Southern distinctiveness before the war, ring tournaments and the ethos of medieval chivalry they promoted, the Protestant Episcopal Church and its role in managing the sectional crisis, postbellum immigration societies and their vision of the plantation South remade in the image of British manors, and the role that state historical associations played in reunion and the entrenchment of the Lost Cause mythology as the predominant historical framework for interpreting the American Civil War.
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A multimedia website for the Battle of GettysburgRasmussen, Mark Norman 01 January 2004 (has links)
This thesis explains the development of a website for eighth graders about the Battle of Gettysburg. One purpose of the project is to provide several primary source documents, pictures, video from a reenactment of the Battle of Gettysburg, clips from movies about the Civil War, and other material that suppport the students in their learning. The second purpose is to fulffill standard 8.10 of History-Social Science Content Standards for eight grade. This project will help students fulfill this requirement.
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George S. Patton Jr. and the Lost Cause LegacyRodriguez, Ismael 08 1900 (has links)
Historians have done their duty in commemorating an individual who was, as Sidney Hook’s Hero in History would describe, an “event making-man.” A myriad of works focused on understanding the martial effort behind George S. Patton Jr. from his ancestral lineage rooted in military tradition to his triumph during the Second World War. What is yet to be understood about Patton, however, is the role that the Civil War played in his transformation into one of America’s iconic generals. For Patton, the Lost Cause legacy, one that idealized the image of the Confederate soldier in terms of personal honor, courage, and duty, became the seed for his preoccupation for glory.
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"The Best Stuff Which the State Affords": a Portrait of the Fourteenth Texas Infantry in the Civil WarParker, Scott Dennis 12 1900 (has links)
This study examines the social and economic characteristics of the men who joined the Confederate Fourteenth Texas Infantry Regiment during the Civil War and provides a narrative history of the regiment's wartime service. The men of the Fourteenth Infantry enlisted in 1862 and helped to turn back the Federal Red River Campaign in April 1864. In creating a portrait of these men, the author used traditional historical sources (letters, diaries, medical records, secondary narratives) as well as statistical data from the 1860 United States census, military service records, and state tax rolls. The thesis places
the heretofore unknown story of the Fourteenth Texas Infantry within the overall body of Civil War historiography.
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Making a Good Soldier: a Historical and Quantitative Study of the 15th Texas Infantry, C. S. A.Hamaker, Blake Richard 12 1900 (has links)
In late 1861, the Confederate Texas government commissioned Joseph W. Speight to raise an infantry battalion. Speight's Battalion became the Fifteenth Texas Infantry in April 1862, and saw almost no action for the next year as it marched throughout Texas, Arkansas, and the Indian Territory. In May 1863 the regiment was ordered to Louisiana and for the next seven months took an active role against Federal troops in the bayou country. From March to May 1864 the unit helped turn away the Union Red River Campaign. The regiment remained in the trans-Mississippi region until it disbanded in May 1865. The final chapter quantifies age, family status, wealthholdings, and casualties among the regiment's members.
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