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John Newton (engineer)
Catherine Mary White Foster's Eyewitness Account of the Battle of Gettysburg, with Background on the Foster Family Union Soldiers David A
Did Meade Begin a Counteroffensive After Pickett's Charge?
Gettysburg: Three Days of Glory Study Guide
Course Reader
1 Styple, William B., Ed. Generals in Bronze: Interviewing the Commanders of the Civil War. Kearny, N.J.: Belle Grove Publis
Civil War Documents.Pdf
"Impracticable, Inhospitable, and Dismal Country": an Examination of the Environmental Impact on Civil War Military Op
Portraits of Notable Iowans
Civil War Diary of Private John Scott 102Nd Infantry Regiment Company
List of Articles Presented to the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania
"4.+?$ Signature and Title of Certifying Official
Religious Rebels: the Religious Views and Motivations of Confederate Generals
Mahan at West Point, “Gallic Bias,” and the “Old Army”: the Subconscious of Leadership at Gettysburg
Two Generals in Trouble On
Civil War Manuscripts
Quick Play Mini Game Scenario Rules
The Great Battle Never Fought
Woodland Guardian Inside
Top View
History of the 27Th Regiment, N.Y.Vols
Annual Reunion
The Opening Fight at Gettysburg: a Modern Military Analysis
The Pointless Criticism of General Meade's Meeting with His Generals on the Night of July 2, 1863
The Press Reports the Battle of Gettysburg
George Meade's Mixed Legacy
Did General Meade Desire to Retreat
Corps of Engineer Officers for Whom FORMER Streets Were Named by the Manhattan Engineering District but No Biography Could Be Found
In History Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County · Historic Monographs Collection
RIGHT GONE AWRY “We Broke, Tearing Back Pell-Mell
A Brief History and Analysis of the the Hunt-Hancock Controversy
George Gordon Meade and the Pursuit from Gettysburg
OR “RUNNING MIT HOWARD”: ATTITUDES TOWARDS GERMAN-AMERICANS in the CIVIL WAR by Adam Rich
Confederate Military Manuscripts
Mansfield Lovell Collection RG 61 Louisiana State Museum Historical Center May 2012
John Newton. 1823-1895
Dangerous Subjects in Every Sense: Violence and Politics at the Law Department of the University of Mississippi