1st Edition / 1st Printing - Signed by both editors. No marks or writing observed in text. Binding tight and square. Binding unbroken - Appears unread. View More...
Signed by Author. Very Good+. No marks or writing observed in text. Binding tight and square. Gently read if at all. . . . . . . . . . . . Contains the story of ten men from the 3rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, their fight at Culp's Hill, desertion to North Carolina, conviction and execution. View More...
Printed per the authority of House Concurrent Resolution 361, September 7, 1988 - No marks or writing observed in text. Congressman's paper stamp inside front cover. Binding tight and square. Gently read. View More...
Stated 1st Edition. 1st Edition / 1st Printing - Full number line. No marks or writing observed in text. Binding tight and square. Gently read. View More...
3 Volume set in slipcase. 1st Edition (Time-Life 1991) - No marks noted in text. Bindings are tight and square. Gently used. Slip case has damp stainon one interior side but remakabley I find no evidence of the stain on any of the book covers nor pages. . . . . The 3 volumes are: VOLUME ONE: ARMS AND EQUIPMENT OF THE UNION - Heavily illustrated with photographs of actual equipment and clothing worn by soldiers of the Union army. Text illuminates the illustrations rather than the other way around. By no means exhaustive but a valuable resource for reenactors and historians looking to increase ... View More...
Signed and inscribed by Gary W. Gallagher. 1st Edition / 2nd Printing (1995) - No marks noted in text. Binding is tight and square. Gently read. From private collection, dust cover is in archival mylar. . . . . . . . . . TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1.) Lee's army has not lost any of its prestige: the impact of Gettysburg on the Army of Northern Virginia and the Confederate home front by Garry W. Gallagher -- 2.) Cross purposes: Longstreet, Lee, and Confederate attack plans for July 3 at Gettysburg by William Garrett Piston -- 3.) Pickett's charge: the convergence of history and myth in the Southe... View More...
Signed and inscribed by Gary W. Gallagher. 1st Edition / 1st Printing - No marks noted in text. Binding is tight and square. Gently read. From private collection, dust cover is in archival mylar. . . . . . . . . . . TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1.) Lee's army has not lost any of its prestige: the impact of Gettysburg on the Army of Northern Virginia and the Confederate home front by Garry W. Gallagher -- 2.) Cross purposes: Longstreet, Lee, and Confederate attack plans for July 3 at Gettysburg by William Garrett Piston -- 3.) Pickett's charge: the convergence of history and myth in the Southern pa... View More...
No marks noted in text. Binding is tight and square. Gently read. Remainder mark on bottom and top page edges. Light foxing to page edges. . . . . . . . Thomas Jonathan Jackson was the most renowned and skillful commander of Confederate troops in the Civil War. Not even Lee or Stuart matched his purely military intelligence-his intransigence at Bull Run (which earned him the name 'Stonewall'), his knack for knowing when to attack and retreat, which he showed throughout the Shenandoah campaign, his tactical brilliance at Chancellorsville. He was stern, a strict Calvinist, a single-minded office... View More...
1st Edition (1906) - No marks noted in text. Binding is sound. Hinges have been reinforced. Previous owner's name and date (Christmas 1907) on front end paper and note on inside front cover. Piece of tape randomly placed on title page. No evidence of a tear. View More...
No marks noted in text. Binding is tight and square. Gently read. . . . . . . . . 'General James Longstreet is one of the most controversial figures of the American Civil War. According to some, he was partially to blame for the Confederate defeat at Gettysburg; according to others, if Lee had followed Longstreet's advice, they would have won that battle. He has been called stubborn and vain; and he has been lauded as one of the greatest tacticians of the Civil War. All agree, however, that Longstreet was not only a dependable fighter but completely devoted to Robert E. Lee, who relied on him ... View More...
Very Good+ No marks or writing observed in text. Binding is tight and square. Spine is uncracked. Appears to be unread. Minor shelf-wear to dust jacket. View More...
No marks noted in text. Binding is tight and square. Gently read. . . . . . . . . . 'Christopher McIlwain's Civil War Alabama is a landmark book that sheds invigorating new light on the causes, the course, and the outcomes in Alabama of the nation's greatest drama and trauma. Based on twenty years of exhaustive research that draws on a vast trove of primary sources such as letters, newspapers, and personal journals, Civil War Alabama presents compelling new explanations for how Alabama's white citizens came to take up arms against the federal government.' View More...
Signed by Editor/Annotator - No marks noted in text. Binding is tight and square. Gently read. . . . . . . . . . . April 1862, the Civil War was one year old. Huntsville Alabama was invaded and occupied by Union general Mitchel. Locals either conducted guerilla warfare in the surrounding countryside, with raids and reprisals, or endured the troop occupation, hopeful the war would end soon. This first-hand account by diarist, by Mary Jane Chadick, was updated with added commentary by Nancy M. Rohr. We discover that rational men, on both sides, Union and Confederacy, were ignored or persecuted.... View More...