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Upon the Altar of the Nation

Page 67

by Harry S. Stout


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  Randall, James G. The Civil War and Reconstruction. Boston, 1937.

  ————. Constitutional Problems under Lincoln. Urbana, 1951.

  Reardon, Carol. Pickett’s Charge in History and Memory. Chapel Hill, 1997.

  Reynolds, David S. John Brown, Abolitionist: The Man Who Killed Slavery, Sparked the Civil War, and Seeded Civil Rights. New York, 2005.

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  Schweiger, Beth Barton. The Gospel Working Up: Progress and the Pulpit in Nineteenth-Century Virginia. New York, 2000.

  Sears, Stephen W. George B. McClellan: The Young Napoleon. New York, 1988.

  ————. Landscape Turned Red: The Battle of Antietam. New Haven, 1983.

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  Silver, James W. Confederate Morale and Church Propaganda. Tuscaloosa, AL, 1957.

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  ————. Ulysses S. Grant: Triumph over Adversity, 1822-1865. New York, 2000.

  Simpson, Marc, ed. Winslow Homer: Paintings of the Civil War. San Francisco, 1989.

  Sinha, Manisha. The Counterrevolution of Slavery: Politics and Ideology in Antebellum South Carolina. Chapel Hill, 2000.

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  Sprague, Dean. Freedom under Lincoln. Boston, 1965.

  Stampp, Kenneth M. And the War Came: The North and the Secession Crisis, 1860-1861. New York, 1950.

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  Stowe, Steven M. Intimacy and Power in the Old South: Ritual in the Lives of the Planters. Baltimore, 1987.

  Stowell, Daniel W. Rebuilding Zion: The Religious Reconstruction of the South, 1863-1877. New York, 1998.

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  Sutherland, Daniel E. “Abraham Lincoln, John Pope, and the Origins of Total War.” Journal of Military History 56 (1992): 567-86.

  ————. “Guerrilla Warfare, Democracy, and the Fate of the Confederacy.” Journal of Southern History 68 (2002).

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  ————. Shiloh: Bloody April. New York, 1974.

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  ————. “Robert E. Lee and the Concept of Honor.” Unpublished paper, 2004.

  ————. The Shaping of Southern Culture: Honor, Grace, and War, 1760s-1880s. Chapel Hill, 2001.

  INDEX

  Page numbers in italics refer to illustrations.

  Abbott, Henry

  abolition, abolitionists

  Beecher’s view of

  Bennett and

  black soldiers and

  Brown as viewed by

  compensated emancipation and

  Emancipation Proclamation and

  Federal defeats as viewed by

  Fugitive Slave Act and

  and global implications of emancipation

  and justifications and aims of war

  Lincoln as viewed by

  lithographs and

  Puritanism and

  secession as viewed by

  songs and

  Unionism and

  see also emancipation; slavery

  Adams, Charles Francis, Jr.

  Adams, Ezra

  Adams, Henry Brooks

  Adams, John

  Adams, John Quincy

  AfricanAmericans

  civil rights for

  draft riots and

  Emancipation Proclamation and

  just conduct and

  prisoners of war

  racism and, see racism and white supremacy

  soldiers

  women, rape of see also freedmen; slaves

  Age, The

  Alabama

  Alcott, Louisa May

  Alexandria, Va., cemetery in

  Allen, Benjamin Russell

  Amelia Courthouse

  America, see United States ofAmerica

  American Anti-Slavery Society

  American civil religion

  black soldiers and

  Civil War in formation of

  flags and

  founding myth of

  incarnation of

  Lincoln and

  messianism and

  presidency and

  redeemer nation identity in

  sacred days, monuments, and texts of

  West Point and see also patriotism

  American Peace Society

  American Revolution

  American civil religion and

  Antichrist and

  and idea of freedom

  meaning of

  national identity and

  secession and

  Tupper and

  Anaconda Plan

  Anderson, “Bloody Bill”

  Anderson, John Emerson

  Anderson, Richard

  Anderson, Robert

  Andersonvflle prison

  Andrew, John A.

  Andrews, J. Cutler

  Antichrist

  Antietam, battle of

  lithographic prints of

  photographs of

  Apotheosis (Wiest)

  Apotheosis of George Washington (Barralet)

  Appomattox Court House

  Arkansas

  Armistead, Lewis

  Army of Georgia

  Army of Missouri

  Army of Northern Virginia

  at Antietam

  at Cold Harbor

  Davis’s address to

  at Spotsylvania Court House

  surrender of

  Army of Tennessee

  Army of the Cumberland

  Army of the James

  Army of the Kentucky

  Army of the Mississippi

  Army of the Ohio

  Army of the Potomac

  at Antietam

  casualties in

  at Cold Harbor

  at Lincoln’s funeral

  Meade as commander of

  newspaper vendors and

  Army of the Shenandoah

  Army of the Tennessee

  Army of the Trans-Mississippi

  Army of Virginia

  art

  music, see music

  painting

  lithography see lithographs

  photography, see photographs

  racism in

  theater

  Associated Press

  Atlanta, Ga.

  Sherman’s campaign in

  Atlantic Monthly

  Augusta, Ga.

  Augustine of Hippo, Saint

  Axtell, James

  Bailyn, Bernard

  Baird, Absalom

  Baker, Jean H.

  Baker, William

  Ball’s Bluff, battle of

  Baltimore, Md.


  riots in

  Banks, Nathaniel P..

  Baptists

  Barker, Thomas

  Barnard, George

  Barnard, John Gross

  Barnes, Albert

  Barnes, W H.

  Barralet, John James

  Barten, O. S.

  Bartholomew, J. G.

  Bates, James

  Bates, Therena

  Battle above the Clouds

  “Battle Hymn of the Republic, The” (Howe)

  Battle of the Crater

  Battle of the Wilderness

  Beauregard, Pierre Gustave T.

  at Petersburg

  Bee, Barnard

  Beecher, Henry Ward

  Beecher, Lyman

  Beecher, Thomas K.

  Bellah, Robert

  Benjamin, Judah

  Bennett, James Gordon

  Berdan, Hiram G.

  Berlin, Ira

  Bernard, Kenneth A.

  Best, Geoffrey

  Bible

  Lincoln and

  Bill, A. W

  blacks, see African Americans

  Blair, Francis Preston

  Bleeding Kansas

  Blight, David

  Bliss, T. E.

  Bloody Angle

  Boardman, George

  Boardman, Henry

  Booth, John Wilkes

  Booth, Robert Russell

  border states

  Boston Telegraph

  Boykin, Edward

  Brady, Mathew

  Bragg, Braxton

  at Chickamauga

  relieved of command

  Branch, John L.

  Brandy Station, Va.

  Breckinridge, John C.

  Brice’s Cross Roads, battle of

  Britain

  emancipation in

  Gettysburg Address and

  Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and

  Broaddus, A.

  Brooks, Preston

  Brough, John

  Brown, Benjamin

  Brown, John

  Cheever and

  Brown, Joseph E.

  Brown, J. Stewart

  Brown, William

  Buchanan, James

  fast day declared by

  Buckingham, Philo B.

  Buckner, Simon Bolivar

  Buell, Don Carlos

  Buford, John

  Bullard, Franklin

  Bull Run, First (First Manassas)

  lithographic prints of

  Bull Run, Second (Second Manassas)

  lithographic prints of

  Bunker Hill

  Bunting, Robert

  burial

  caskets for

  Burnside, Ambrose

  at Antietam

 

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