News
A Q&A with Zaakir Tameez about Charles Sumner and the antislavery movement.
In the Parliamentarian port of Poole the very idea of a pub named "The King's Head" would have been deeply provocative.
The CSS "Shenandoah" only learned of the Confederacy's defeat in the summer of 1865. That June, the cruiser's crew sank 24 ...
The English Civil War will be brought back to life in Oxford this weekend.
Archaeologists at Colonial Williamsburg recently announced the discovery of four Confederate soldier skeletons, revealing a makeshift hospital from the 1862 Battle of Williamsburg.
Life Scout Daniel Zedan kneels beside the newly straightened and cleaned headstone of 1st Sgt. Charles Miller, a Civil War veteran, at St. Charles North Cemetery. The restoration was part of Zedan ...
Charles H. Walker’s legacy from a Union Civil War brigade in Wisconsin remains alive with his diary contents preserved by his descendants. Troy Walker, a La Crosse man who grew up in Rio and ...
The new Civil War Trails sign on the Eastern Shore dedicates Peter Jacob Carter. The sign’s origins lie with Arthur Carter, his grandson.
Never before, or since, has a king met such an untimely end like Charles I. He was proclaimed king in 1625 upon his father’s death and spent the entirety of his reign in conflict with his parliament.
During the English Civil Wars, King Charles received advice from William who was the Bishop of London during this turbulent time. He became a close friend of the king.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results