The Lost Cause: A New Southern History of the War of the Confederates. Comprising a Full and Authentic Account of the Rise and Progress of the Late Southern Confederacy--the Campaigns, Battles, Incidents, and Adventures of the Most Gigantic Struggle of the World's History. Drawn from Official Sources, and Approved by the Most Distinguished Confederate Leaders |
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Page v
... Union . - Not a Consolidated nation- ality . - The Right of Secession . - The Union not the proclamation of a new civil polity . - Not a political revolution . - A convenience of the States , with no mission apart from the States ...
... Union . - Not a Consolidated nation- ality . - The Right of Secession . - The Union not the proclamation of a new civil polity . - Not a political revolution . - A convenience of the States , with no mission apart from the States ...
Page vi
... Union . - Calhoun's picture of the Union . - A noble vision never realized .. 45 CHAPTER III . Material decline of the South in the Union . - Shifting of the numbers and enterprise of the country from the Southern to the Northern States ...
... Union . - Calhoun's picture of the Union . - A noble vision never realized .. 45 CHAPTER III . Material decline of the South in the Union . - Shifting of the numbers and enterprise of the country from the Southern to the Northern States ...
Page vii
... Union was a concession to the South . - Hypocrisy of this party . - Indications of the coming catastrophe of disunion . The presidential canvass of 1860. - Declarations of the Democratic Party . The Charleston Convention . - Secession ...
... Union was a concession to the South . - Hypocrisy of this party . - Indications of the coming catastrophe of disunion . The presidential canvass of 1860. - Declarations of the Democratic Party . The Charleston Convention . - Secession ...
Page viii
... Union . Why he joined the Confederate cause . - His speech in the State House at Richmond . His organization of the military force of Virginia . - Military council in Richmond . — The early reputation of Lee ... .... 100 CHAPTER VII ...
... Union . Why he joined the Confederate cause . - His speech in the State House at Richmond . His organization of the military force of Virginia . - Military council in Richmond . — The early reputation of Lee ... .... 100 CHAPTER VII ...
Page xxviii
... Union Party " in the South . - How Gov. Brown , of Georgia , was used by it . Its persistent design upon the Virginia Legislature . - How it was rebuffed.- Heroic choice of Virginia . - President Davis ' tribute to this State . - Want ...
... Union Party " in the South . - How Gov. Brown , of Georgia , was used by it . Its persistent design upon the Virginia Legislature . - How it was rebuffed.- Heroic choice of Virginia . - President Davis ' tribute to this State . - Want ...
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Common terms and phrases
A. P. Hill advance arms army arrest artillery assault attack bank batteries battle Beauregard Bragg brigade campaign captured Carolina cavalry Charleston column command commenced Confederacy Confederate forces Congress Constitution contest corps crossed D. H. Hill declared defence division early enemy enemy's evacuation Federal field fire flank fleet Fort Sumter Fort Wagner Fredericksburg front garrison Government Grant gunboats guns held Hill hundred infantry Jackson James River Johnston Kentucky Lee's Lincoln Longstreet loss Manassas McClellan ment miles military Mississippi Missouri moved movement night North Northern occupied officers operations Orleans party pieces of artillery political position Potomac President Davis prisoners railroad rear regiments reinforcements retreat Richmond river road Shenandoah Valley Sherman side slavery soldiers South South Carolina Southern success Sumter superiour surrender Tennessee thousand tion troops Union United Valley vessels Vicksburg victory Virginia Washington wounded