"All Cut to Pieces and Gone to Hell": The Civil War, Race Relations, and the Battle of Poison Spring |
Contents
Introduction | 9 |
White Society and AfricanAmerican Soldiers | 31 |
The Changing Role of Blacks in the Civil War | 59 |
The First Kansas Colored at Honey Springs | 79 |
Who Wrote the Poison Spring Letter? | 99 |
About the Contributors | 139 |
Other editions - View all
"All Cut to Pieces and Gone to Hell": The Civil War, Race Relations, and the ... Mark K. Christ No preview available - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
20 July African descent American Civil War April 18 Arkadelphia Arkansas Historical artillery August battery Battle of Poison battlefield black soldiers black troops Bowles to William brigade Camden Expedition Captain captured Choctaw Civil Colonel Williams column command Company Confederacy Confederate Armies Confederate line Confederate soldiers Cooper to William DeBlack DeMorse Diary Eighteenth Iowa enemy fight forage Fort Smith Frederick Steele Gregory J.W. Urwin Hearn History Honey Springs hundred Ibid Indian Jo Shelby John Bowles Judson Kansas Colored Kansas Colored Infantry Kansas Colored Volunteer Kansas Colored's killed letter Lieutenant Little Rock Louisiana Major Marmaduke Massacre master Maxey Maxey's miles Mississippi Missouri moved Negro North Carolina Official Records Old State House ordered plantation Poison Spring Rebel reported Rugged and Sublime Second Kansas Colored Shelby shot slavery South Spence Family Steele's Sterling Price Thayer thousand Twenty-ninth Texas Cavalry Union Army Union forces units University of Arkansas white Southerners wounded wrote Yankees