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  • Joe Hooker; Gifted Soldier, Flawed Commander, Sharp-Tongued Critic (Part 1)

    Major Gen. Joseph Hooker is well-remembered for his generalship at the battles of Chancellorsville and Lookout Mountain—and his outspoken nature, attacking peers and superiors with reckless abandon. Gamaliel Bradford, a pioneer of psychological studies, explored Hooker in a 1914 article in The At...

  • Life of Luftwaffe Fighter Pilot

    Oskar Ziesig, born in 1919 in Gelsenkirchen near Essen, Germany, recounts his life, military career, and capture as a Luftwaffe pilot during World War II in an interview conducted in Australia on August 13, 2004. His firsthand account is creatively interwoven with period archival footage and prec...

  • Joe Hooker; Gifted Soldier, Flawed Commander, Sharp-Tongued Critic (Part 3)

    Major Gen. Joseph Hooker is well-remembered for his generalship at the battles of Chancellorsville and Lookout Mountain—and his outspoken nature, attacking peers and superiors with reckless abandon. Gamaliel Bradford, a pioneer of psychological studies, explored Hooker in a 1914 article in The At...

  • "The Pleasures and Perils of Picketing in View of the Enemy"

    During the early days of the war, the country community of Bailey's Crossroads, Va., lay between the defenses of Washington, D.C., and Confederate outposts on Munson's Hill. A report of life on the Union picket lines during this time is a unique and sometimes light-hearted view.

  • Battle of Franklin -The Troops Fought With a Desperation Bordering Upon Madness

    News of the Union victory at the Battle of Franklin made its way across the North, with early reports filed by correspondents. One of these writers, 1st Lt. Daniel Royse, who started the war in the 40th Indiana Infantry and served as an aide to Brig. Gen. George D. Wagner, detailed the action in ...