Call number | Item |
E | History: United States (General) (Go to start of category) |
E642 .G71 | Memorial Day: G. A. R. Programme for May 29th, 1875, by Grand Army of the Republic. Department of Iowa (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E642 .H2 | A Few Spoken Words: The Consecration of The Sixties; Felicitations of A Five-Year-old (Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen, 1915), by Lewis A. Harding (HTML and page images at Indiana) |
E642 .H68 1873 | Address Delivered Before Theodore Winthrop Encampment, Post 35, G.A.R., at Academy of Music, Chelsea, Mass., Memorial Day, May 30, 1873 (Boston: Rockwell and Churchill, 1873), by William H. Hodgkins (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E642 .M82 | Memorial Ceremonies at the Graves of Our Soldiers. Saturday, May 30, 1868 (published 1869), by Frank Moore (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E642 .S31 | Memorial Day (Decoration Day): Its Celebration, Spirit, and Significance As Related in Prose and Verse, With a Non-Sectional Anthology of the Civil War (New York: Moffat, Yard and Co., 1911), ed. by Robert Haven Schauffler (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E645 .E53 | Historic Southern Monuments: Representative Memorials of the Heroic Dead of the Southern Confederacy (New York and Washington: Neale Pub. Co., 1911), by B. A. C. Emerson |
E645 .S572 1895 | The Sponsor Souvenir Album and History of the United Confederate Veterans' Reunion, 1895: Patriotic Poems, War Songs, Romantic Incidents, Biographical and Historical Sketches (Houston: Sponsor Souvenir Co., 1895), ed. by William Bledsoe Philpott |
E645 .W46 2016 | Whose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy (first edition; Montgomery, AL: Southern Poverty Law Center, ca. 2016), by Booth Gunter and Jamie Kizzire, contrib. by Cindy Kent (PDF at splcenter.org) |
E645 .W46 2022 | Whose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy (third edition; Montgomery, AL: Southern Poverty Law Center, 2022), by Kimberly Probolus (PDF with commentary at splcenter.org) |
E646 .C74 1898 | Catalogue of the Confederate Museum, Twelfth and Clay Streets, Richmond, Va. (Richmond: J. N. Jones, 1898), by Confederate Memorial Literary Society (page images at HathiTrust) |
E646 .C74 1905 | Catalogue of the Confederate Museum, of the Confederate Memorial Literary Society (Richmond: Ward and Duke, 1905), by Confederate Memorial Literary Society |
E646 .C746 | In Memoriam Sempiternam (Richmond: Confederate Museum, 1896), by Confederate Memorial Literary Society, ed. by Virginia Armistead Garber |
E647 .A2 | Siege of Washington, D.C., Written Expressly for Little People, by F. Colburn Adams (Gutenberg text) |
E647.C3 | American Caricatures Pertaining to the Civil War: Reproduced from the Original Lithographs Published from 1856-1872, With Introduction (New York: Brentano's, 1918) (page images at HathiTrust) |
E647 .L52 | Ye Book of Copperheads (Philadelphia: F. Leypoldt, 1863), by Charles Godfrey Leland and H. P. Leland (Gutenberg text and illustrated HTML) |
E647 .M81 | Personal and Political Ballads, by Frank Moore (page images at MOA) |
E647 .P73 | The Slaveholders' Rebellion (1865), by David Plumb (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E647 .S6 | War Poetry of the South, ed. by William Gilmore Simms (Gutenberg text) |
E649 .H19 1866 | The Life and Adventures, Songs, Services, and Speeches of Private Miles O'Reilly (47th regiment, New York Volunteers) (New York: Carleton, 1864), by Charles G. Halpine |
E649 .H39 | National Sermons: Sermons, Speeches and Letters on Slavery and Its War, by Gilbert Haven (page images at MOA) |
E649 .P42 | Dead on the Field of Honor (reprinted from the Ohio State Journal, ca. 1868), by George Whitfield Pepper (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E649 .V77 | Our National Discipline, by Marvin R. Vincent (page images at MOA) |
E650 .A94 | Who Was the Rebel, the Traitor: The Trans-Susquehanna Man or the Cis-Susquehanna Man? An Oration Delivered by the Rev. James Battle Avirett (ca. 1897), by James B. Avirett |
E650 .B533 1915 | A Protest Against Lincoln Worship at the South (Richmond, VA: W. C. Hill Printing Co., 1915), by O. W. Blacknall |
E650 .G62 1929 | Address of General A. T. Goodwyn, Commander-in-Chief of the United Confederate Veterans, at Their 39th Reunion, Held at Charlotte, N.C., June 5th, 1929 (revised and published by request, ca. 1929), by Albert Taylor Goodwyn |