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Civil War Times
June 2005
Eric Ethier
Firebrand in a Powder Keg: Nathaniel Lyon in St. Louis When secession fever threatened Missouri, a hotheaded gesture by a Yankee touched off riots but helped keep the state in the Union. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
James B. Ronan II
Union Regulars Brigade Desperate Stand at Chickamauga Civil War Brigadier General John King's disciplined brigade of Union Regulars found itself tested as never before at Chickamauga. For two bloody days, the Regulars dashed from one endangered spot to another, seeking to save their army from annihilation. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military History Quarterly
Spring 2006
Stuart W. Sanders
Robert Charles Tyler: Last Civil War Confederate General Slain in Combat Against impossible odds and following orders issued half a year earlier, Robert Charles Tyler became the last Confederate general slain in Civil War combat. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
January 2007
Gordon Berg
Battle of Chickamauga and Gordon Granger's Reserve Corps In 1863, Gordon Granger's rookie Reserve Corps saved the Army of the Cumberland from impending destruction. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
David A. Norris
Bloody Day at Boteler's Ford Just two days after the Battle of Antietam, the deadliest day of the Civil War, the savage Battle of Shepherdstown made for a bloody little coda to the 1862 Maryland campaign. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
Robert Collins Suhr
Little Phil Sheridan Wins His Spurs At an obscure railroad station in northern Mississippi, an equally obscure Union cavalry colonel faced a personal and professional moment of truth. His name was Phil Sheridan, and his coolness and dash clearly marked him for bigger things. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
January 2007
Mike Haskew
Battle of Chickamauga Overconfident and overextended, the Union Army of the Cumberland advanced into the deep woods of northwest Georgia. Waiting Confederates did not intend for them to leave. At Chickamauga Creek, the two sides collided. mark for My Articles similar articles
Civil War Times
March 2007
Richard F. Welch
Burning High Bridge: The South's Last Hope The Army of Northern Virginia's final opportunity to escape Grant's net disappeared on the banks of the Appomattox -- along with the dream of a Confederate nation. mark for My Articles similar articles
Civil War Times
July 2006
Jeffry D. Wert
17th Maine Infantry in the Battle of Gettysburg The 17th Maine helped transform a Gettysburg wheatfield into a legend. mark for My Articles similar articles
Civil War Times
September 2006
Ted Alexander
Battle of Antietam: Two Great American Armies Engage in Combat The opposing armies at Antietam were two very different forces commanded by two very different men. mark for My Articles similar articles
Civil War Times
July 2007
Michael Dreese
Fighting and Dying for the Colors at Gettysburg Beyond their practical value on Civil War battlefields, regimental flags and other banners embodied the pride, honor and bravery of the soldiers who willingly gave their lives to defend them. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
Brent L. Vosburg
Cavalry Clash at Hanover Southern beau sabreur J.E.B. Stuart hardly expected to run head-on into enemy cavalry on his second ride around the Union Army. But a trio of 'boy generals' would soon give the famed Confederate horseman all the action he could handle. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
July 2005
Jeffry C. Burden
Failed Attack at Vicksburg Ulysses S. Grant thought his formidable Army of the Tennessee could take Vicksburg from a "beaten" foe by direct assault. He was wrong, thanks to near-impregnable fortifications, renewed Southern spirit, and surprisingly suspect Northern generalship. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
March 10, 2005
Fred L. Ray
Pre-Dawn Assault on Fort Stedman Led by select groups of sharpshooters, the weary, muddy troops of the Army of Northern Virginia made one last desperate push to break out of Petersburg. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
September 2006
Gerald J. Smith
44th Georgia Regiment Volunteers in the American Civil War The hard-fighting 44th Georgia suffered some of the heaviest losses of any regiment in the Civil War. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
Todd S. Berkoff
Bloody Baptism for the Black Hats John Gibbon's mostly green Midwestern troops found themselves in quite a scrape as the sun set on August 28, 1862. His Black Hat Brigade would never forget their baptism of fire at Brawner's Farm. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
Michael E. Haskew
Union General William Rosecrans's attack on Confederate General Braxton Bragg's Army of Tennessee American Civil War Union General William Rosecrans bided his time, waiting to attack Confederate General Braxton Bragg's Rebel army at Murfreesboro, 30 miles south of Nashville. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
January 2008
Curtis D. Crockett
The Union's Bloody Miscue at Spotsylvania's Muleshoe How Colonel Emory Upton's brilliant plan for limiting casualties devolved into the most primal combat of the war. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military History Quarterly
Noah Andre Trudeau
Charles Lee's Disgrace at the Battle of Monmouth Charles Lee's military credentials were solid. But his failure to coordinate subordinates led to a crucial breakdown at the Battle of Monmouth, and a rare public rebuke from George Washington. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
November 2005
James A. Morgan
Ball's Bluff: 'A Very Nice Little Military Chance' Confederate soldiers drove inexperienced Union troops acting on faulty intelligence into the Potomac River like lemmings. mark for My Articles similar articles
World War II
December 2006
Mark J. Reardon
Battle of the Hurtgen Forest: The 9th Infantry Division Suffered in the Heavily Armed Woods The bitter and bloody experience of the 9th Infantry Division in the Hurtgen Forest in autumn 1944 should have been enough to warn Allied leaders that the German army wasn't finished just yet. mark for My Articles similar articles
World War II
Jon Guttman
Closing the Falaise Pocket In August 1944, the Germans fought desperately to hold open their last escape route from Normandy while the Polish 1st Armored and the U.S. 90th Infantry divisions fought equally hard to close it. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
Gary W. Dolzall
Enemies Front and Rear Union forces under George H. Thomas destroyed the Confederate Army of Tennessee at Nashville as Thomas endured his own battle of resolve with Ulysses S. Grant. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
Ronald E. Bullock
Last-Ditch Rebel Stand at Petersburg After nearly 10 months of trench warfare, Confederate resistance at Petersburg, Va., suddenly collapsed. Desperate to save his army, Robert E. Lee called on his soldiers for one last miracle. mark for My Articles similar articles
Military History Quarterly
Thomas Fleming
Old Hickory's Finest Hour In January 1815, General Andrew Jackson led a menagerie of American defenders against some of the British Empire's finest soldiers in a battle that would determine the future of America. mark for My Articles similar articles
Civil War Times
Thomas T. Taylor
Eyewitness to the Battle of Atlanta Among the blue-clad soldiers moving against Atlanta in late July 1864 was Major Thomas T. Taylor of Georgetown, Ohio. In these passages from the letter he wrote to his wife, Netta, he described what he saw, experienced, and did during the Battle of Atlanta. mark for My Articles similar articles
World War II
Ralph E. Hersko, Jr.
Winter Fury Near Elsenborn Ridge The heroic American stand at the towns of Krinkelt and Rocherath slowed the German advance in the Battle of the Bulge. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
January 12, 2005
Michael C. Hardy
April 2, 1865: 'A Day of Carnage and Blood' Sixth Corps Yankees stumbled out of their earthworks and toward the muddy pits of the Army of Northern Virginia. It was the beginning of the end. mark for My Articles similar articles
Civil War Times
May 2006
Maurice D'Aoust
Hoodwinked During the Civl War: Union Military Deception Appearances could be misleading on the battlefields of the Civil War. mark for My Articles similar articles
America's Civil War
September 2007
Antietam Eyewitness Accounts Quotes from soldiers who experienced the carnage of the single bloodiest day in American history. mark for My Articles similar articles
World War II
Stanley A. Frankel
Battle for Bougainville: Hell on Hill 700 Losing Hill 700 to the Japanese meant defeat for the American forces on Bougainville. To the men of the 37th Infantry Division, that was unthinkable. mark for My Articles similar articles
Civil War Times
August 2005
John Cabell Early
A Southern Boy Remembers Gettysburg Major General Jubal Early's nephew recalls the famous meeting on July 1 between his uncle and General Robert E. Lee during the 1863 invasion of Pennsylvania. mark for My Articles similar articles
World War II
Albano Castelletto
The Last Horse Warriors In a firsthand account, a former artillery lieutenant recalls his experience with the Voloire Regiment during Operation Barbarossa, when Italy's horse-drawn field artillery proved its worth on the Russian Front. mark for My Articles similar articles
World War II
March 2006
Battle of the Bulge: Robert Walter's Baptism of Fire Swept up in the largest American campaign of the war in Europe, Robert Walter remembers the Battle of the Bulge as a series of small dramas that played themselves out in the wooded hills near Elsenborn Ridge. mark for My Articles similar articles
American History
October 2007
James B. Daniels
The Battle of Chippewa An unlikely victory on the Canadian side of the Niagara River during the War of 1812 helped transform the motley U.S. Army into a professional fighting force. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wild West
William A. Dobak
Buffalo Soldiers: Sorting Fact from Fiction Known as buffalo soldiers, though they did not use that term themselves, the black servicemen who saw duty in the Wild West generally had the same burdens and privileges as their white counterparts. mark for My Articles similar articles
Vietnam
June 28, 2004
Thomas E. Faley
Operation Marauder: Allied Offensive in the Mekong Delta On New Year's Day 1966, with Australian and New Zealand combat forces attached, the 173rd Airborne Brigade struck VC positions in the Mekong Delta. mark for My Articles similar articles
Civil War Times
May 2007
Letters From Readers These Honored Dead... Rewriting History With the 1st... Gallant Goat... The Lincoln-Davis Affair?... Correction... mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
November 2014
Sandra I. Erwin
Generals Get Real About Missions, Budget Life in the "post-war" Army indeed will be different. It will not be one of dreary rotational deployments but one of multitasking and responding to unforeseen events. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
April 2005
Washington Pulse The cost of equipping soldiers has escalated dramatically since the beginning of the war in Iraq... Pentagon unhappy about leaked memo... Turf feud between the Air Force and the Army on how best to destroy targets on the ground continues... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
December 2009
Grace V. Jean
Army to Create Education Programs for Soldiers Who Are Too Busy to Go to School Repeated deployments have kept soldiers away from schoolhouses. But the Army still believes there are ways to provide learning opportunities outside of the traditional education system. mark for My Articles similar articles
National Defense
April 2006
Sandra Erwin
An Army Under Stress: A Tale of Two Green Lines An upcoming decision on whether to begin drawing down U.S. troops in Iraq sets the stage for yet another round of inside-the-Beltway wrangling on the burdens this war is piling on the armed services. mark for My Articles similar articles