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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. |
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. |
Military History David R. Smith |
Joseph Wheeler Fightin' Joe Wheeler lived up to his name in two wars and in two uniforms -- one gray, one blue. |
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. |
America's Civil War September 2007 |
Antietam Eyewitness Accounts Quotes from soldiers who experienced the carnage of the single bloodiest day in American history. |
Reason June 2003 Michael McMenamin |
Teddy Roosevelt's Hidden Legacy How an "imperialist" president's record makes the case for military restraint |
American History October 2006 |
Letters From Readers You Can't Get There From Here... Unduly Promoted... Financing Disclosed... Full Speed Ahead... Name That Tune... |
American History Wyatt Kingseed |
The Assassination of William McKinley Anarchist Leon Czolgosz came to Buffalo, New York, with a mission. He believed that government was evil, and he planned to stamp out that evil, beginning at the top. |
Aviation History January 2008 Michele May |
Aviators: Quentin Roosevelt - 'He died fighting' After Quentin, the youngest son of President Theodore Roosevelt, was killed in action on July 14, 1918, his grave became a mecca for Allied troops. |