The History of the Confederate War
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George Cary Eggleston. The History of the Confederate War
The History of the Confederate War
Table of Contents
Volume 1
Table of Contents
PART I. THE CAUSES OF THE WAR
INTRODUCTION. The Magnitude of the Confederate War
CHAPTER I. A Public, not a Civil, War
CHAPTER II. The Growth of the National Idea
CHAPTER III. The "Irrepressible Conflict"
CHAPTER IV. The Annexation of Texas
CHAPTER V. The Compromise of 1850
CHAPTER VI. Uncle Tom's Cabin
CHAPTER VII. The Repeal of the Missouri Compromise, The Kansas-Nebraska Bill and Squatter Sovereignty
CHAPTER VIII. The Kansas War—The Dred Scott Decision—John Brown's Exploit at Harper's Ferry
CHAPTER IX. The Election of 1860
CHAPTER X. The Birth of War
PART II. THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR
CHAPTER XI. The Reduction of Fort Sumter
CHAPTER XII. The Attitude of the Border States
CHAPTER XIII "Pepper Box" Strategy
CHAPTER XIV. Manassas
CHAPTER XV. The Paralysis of Victory
CHAPTER XVI. The European Menace
CHAPTER XVII. Border Operations
CHAPTER XVIII. The Blockade—The Conquest of the Coast and the Neglect to Follow up the Advantage thus Gained
CHAPTER XIX. The Era of Incapacity
CHAPTER XX. The First Appearance of Grant
CHAPTER XXI. The Situation Before Shiloh
CHAPTER XXII. Between Manassas and Shiloh—The Situation in Virginia
CHAPTER XXIII. Shiloh
CHAPTER XXIV. New Madrid and Island Number 10
CHAPTER XXV. Farragut at New Orleans
CHAPTER XXVI. McClellan's Peninsular Advance
CHAPTER XXVII. Jackson's Valley Campaign
CHAPTER XXVIII. The Seven Days' Battles
CHAPTER XXIX. The Second Manassas Campaign
CHAPTER XXX. Lee's First Invasion of Maryland
Volume 2
Table of Contents
CHAPTER XXXI. The Struggle for Emancipation
CHAPTER XXXII. Burnside's Fredericksburg Campaign
CHAPTER XXXIII. Halleck's Treatment of Grant
CHAPTER XXXIV. Grant at Corinth
CHAPTER XXXV. Bragg's Campaign Against Louisville
CHAPTER XXXVI. Fall and Winter Campaigns at the West and South
CHAPTER XXXVII. The Chancellorsville Campaign
CHAPTER XXXVIII. The Gettysburg Campaign
CHAPTER XXXIX. The Campaign of Vicksburg
CHAPTER XL. The State of Things After Gettysburg
CHAPTER XLI. The Struggle for Charleston
CHAPTER XLII. The Campaigns of Chickamauga and Chattanooga
CHAPTER XLIII. Grant's Strategy—The Red River Campaign—Fort Pillow, Etc
CHAPTER XLIV. Grant's Plan of Campaign
CHAPTER XLV. The Battles in the Wilderness
CHAPTER XLVI. Spottsylvania and the Bloody Angle
CHAPTER XLVII. Cold Harbor and on to Petersburg
CHAPTER XLVIII. The Confederate Cruisers
CHAPTER XLIX. Sherman's Campaign against Atlanta
CHAPTER L. The Bay Fight at Mobile
CHAPTER LI. The Mine Explosion at Petersburg
CHAPTER LII. Early's Invasion of Pennsylvania
CHAPTER LIII. Operations at Petersburg and Sheridan's Valley Campaign
CHAPTER LIV. The Presidential Campaign of 1864
CHAPTER LV. Sherman at Atlanta
CHAPTER LVI. Sherman's "March to the Sea"
CHAPTER LVII. Hood's Campaign
CHAPTER LVIII. Preparations for the Decisive Blow
CHAPTER LIX. The End
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George Cary Eggleston
OK Publishing, 2020
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The petition was as follows:
We, the undersigned, inhabitants of Pennsylvania and Delaware, believing that the Federal Constitution, in pledging the strength of the whole nation to support slavery, violates the Divine Law, makes war upon human rights, and is grossly inconsistent with republican principles; that its attempt to unite freedom and slavery in our body politic has brought upon the country great and manifold evils, and has fully proved that no such union can exist but by the sacrifice of freedom and the supremacy of slavery, respectfully ask you to devise and propose, without delay, some plan for the immediate, peaceful dissolution of the American Union.
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