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Tennessee Historical Quarterly 2003: Vol 62 Index PDF

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() a Ferssiidiiee SHtisto nina Quarterly Index for Volume 62 Demons: Women Soldiers in the American Civil War, rev. 277-278. Compiled by Ann Toplovich Bledsoe, Anthony, 115, 117, 125. Bluegrass Breakdown: The Making of the Old Southern A Fighter From Way Back: The Mexican War Diary of Lt. Sound, noted 383. Daniel Harvey Hill, noted 379. Booker, Harrier, 178. Boone, Daniel, 114. A Hard Trip: A History of the psth Mississippi Infantry, CSA., Bond, Lewis, 246, 252. noted 380-381. Book reviews: A Fighter From Way Back: The Mexican War A Short, Offhand, Killing Affair: Soldiers and Social Conflict Diary of Lt. Daniel Harvey Hill, noted 379; A Hard Trip: during the Mexican-American War, noted 379-380 Aaron Burr: Conspiracy to Treason, rev. 284-285. A History of the psth Mississippi Infantry, CSA., noted Acklen, Joseph A.S., 207. 380-381; A Short, Offhand, Killing Affair: Soldiers and Adams, John Quincy, 198. Social Conflict during the Mexican-American War, noted Adams, Stephen A., 232. 379-380; Aaron Burr: Conspiracy to Treason, tev. 284- Allen, Stacy D., 350. 285; American Congo: The African American Freedom American Congo: The African American Freedom Struggle in Struggle in the Delta, noted 382; Bathed in Blood: the Delta, noted 382. Hunting and Mastery in the Old South, noted 380; Black American Party, 221-233. Soldiers in Blue: African American Troops in the Civil “Andrew Jackson and American Medical Practice: Old War Era, rev. 373-374; Bluegrass Breakdown: The Hickory and His Physicians,” 130-151. Making of the Old Southern Sound, noted 383; “Cave Angola (plantation), 212. Archaeology in the Eastern Woodlands,” special issue of “Apprenticeship: An Example from Rural Massachusetts,” Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology, noted 379; 97-100. Choctaws in a Revolutionary Age, 1750-1830, rev. 276- Armfield, John, 193-198, 202-205, 207-209. 277; Dr. J. G. M. Ramsey: Autobiography and Letters, Austin, John, 27, 59. noted 381-382: E.T. Wickham: A Dream Unguarded, rev. Austin and Welch, 58, 59. 378-379; Fanatics & Fire-eaters: Newspapers and the Baggett, James Alex, The Scalawags: Southern Dissenters in Coming of the Civil War, noted 290-291; Franklin: the Civil War and Reconstruction, rev. 279-280. Tennessee’s Handsomest Town, A Bicentennial History, Ballard, Rice, 197, 206. 1799-1999, rev. 289-290; Freedom’s Promise: Ex-Slave Banks, Jr., Nathaniel P., 227. Families and Citizenship in the Age of Emancipation, Bassett, John S., 137. rev. 287-288; Gallatin 200: A Time Line History Bate, William B., 241, 243-248. Celebrating the Bicentennial of Gallatin, Tennessee, Bathed in Blood: Hunting and Mastery in the Old South, noted 381; God’s Capitalist: Asa Candler of Coca-Cola, noted 380. rev. 374-375; History of Washington County, Tennessee, Battle, Mary Frances “Fannie,” 178. rev. 375-377; Jefferson Davis in Blue: The Life of Beaumont, William, 144. Sherman’s Relentless Warrior, rev. 278-279; Johnny Beauregard, P.G.T., 334, 339-340, 345, Green of the Orphan Brigade: The Journal of a Beckman, John P., 220. Confederate Soldier, noted 380; Mama Learned Us to Bedini, Gaetano, 224. Work: Farm Women in the New South, rev. 280-281; Bell, John, 220, 224, 232. Mountain Holiness: A Photographic Narrative, noted Bell, Michael W.: as contributor, 110; ; “Acknowledgments,” 382-383; Neither Lady Nor Slave: Working Women of the 110; “Apprenticeship: An Example from Rural Old South, noted 380; Night Riders of Reelfoot Lake: The Massachusetts,” 97-100; “‘First Rate and Fashionable’: Untold Story, noted 381; Peace and War on the Anglo- Handmade Nineteenth Century Furniture at the Cherokee Frontier, 1756-1763, rev. 274-276; Signifying Tennessee State Museum,” 5-96; “Identifying Early Serpents and Mardi Gras Runners: Representing Identity Furniture,” 101-104; and “Glossary,” 105-109. in Selected Souths, noted 291; Soulstepping: African Benjamin, Judah P., 359. American Step Shows, noted 382; Tennessee Frontiers: Benton, Thomas Hart, 207. Three Regions in Transition, rev. 282-284; Tennessee Black Soldiers in Blue: African American Troops in the Civil Tales the Textbooks Don't Tell, rev. 377-378; The Civil War Era, rev. 373-374. War in the Western Theater: p7th Annual Mississippi Blair, Francis Preston, 139, 220-221, 225, 229. State University History Forum, rev. 286-287; The Bland, Richard L.: as contributor, 292; “The State of Passions of Andrew Jackson, rev. 366-373; The Political Tennessee: As Seen by Traugott Bromme,” 259-264. Use of Racial Narratives: School Desegregation in Blanton, DeAnne, and Lauren M. Cook, They Fought Like Mobile, Alabama, 1954-1997, noted 383; The Rebuke of Winter 2003 385 ) Y 2 INDEX Len steddsee Slot lo PEN Dua lerly History Southern Agra ind American 291. Conservative Thought, rev. 288-28 [he Scalawags: Cheatham, Benjamin F., 239. Southern Dissenters in the Civil We 1 Reconstruction, Cheatham, R.B., 178. rev. 279-280; The Scopes Trial ef History with Cheathem, Mark R.: as contributor, 292; “‘I Shall Persevere Documents, noted 290; The Sp World of the in the Cause of Truth’: Andrew Jackson Donelson and the Modern Sout rev 281-282: The well Letters: A Election of 1856,” 219-238; revs. Sam Houston, 285-286. Georgian in L] ongstreet’s Corps of Northern Choctaws in a Revolutionary Age, 1750-1830, rev. 276-277. Virginia, noted 290; They Fought | Demons: Women Churton, William, 116. Soldiers in the American Civil War, rev. 277-278; Victory Clairborne, Thomas Augustus, 146. at Home: Manpower and Race ii {merican South Clark, Edward Warren, 303. during World War II, noted 291; and h Good Will and Clark, George Rogers, 114. Affection for Antioch: Remii es of Antioch, Clark, Ida, 307. Tennessee, noted 382. Clawson, William, 40. Bott, Emil, 262 Clay, Henry, 227. Bowers, James Austin, 253. Cleveland, Grover. yaa Boyd, Andrew T., 251 Coffee, John, 134. Boyd, Henry, 40 Coleman, Joseph, 198, 199. Boyd, Jeremiah, 55-56, 92. Collier, Lewis, 197. Bragg, Braxton, 170, 180, 346. Colyar, Arthur S., 247. Bromme, Traugett: “The State of Tennessee: As Seen by Confederate Sequestration Act, 358. Traugott Bromme,” 259-264. Cook, Lauren M., and DeAnne Blanton, They Fought Like Brooks, Preston, 230. Demons: Women Soldiers in the American Civil War, Brown, Aaron V., 232 rev. 277-278. Brown, John C., 240-247. Cooper, Astley, 142. Brown, Neill S., 224. Cooper, Duncan, 328. Brownlow, William G., 229, 232, 239. Cooper, Edmund, 239. Buchanan, James, | Cooper, Henry, 239. Buell, Don Carlos Cooper, Robin, 328. Burns, William, 35 Cooper, William, 142. Burstein, Andrew, The Passions of Andre Jackson, rev. 366- Cornelius, William R., 8. 373: Cox, Joyce, and W. Eugene Cox, History of Washington Butler, Pierce, 43. County, Tennessee, rev. 375-377. Call, Richard K., 227. Crabb, Alfred Leland, 153. Campbell, Arthur, 115. Craighead, Rebecca Carter, 177. Campbell, Charles, 111. Crichlow, James, 3. Campbell, George W., 59. Crook, George B., 171. Campbell, James, 224. Crutchfield, James, and Robert Holladay, Franklin: Campbell, William B., 224. Tennessee's Handsomest Town, A Bicentennial History, Candler, Asa: God’s Capitalist: Asa Candler of Coca-Cola, 1799-1999, rev. 289-290. rev. 374-375. Cucullu, Seraphim, 203. Cantwell, Robert, Bluegrass Breakdown: The Making of the Cullen, William, 132-133, 135, 139, 140. Old Southern Sound, noted 383. Cunningham, Edward, 348-349. Carmack, Edward Ward: “The ‘Saddle-Colored Sapphira’ Currin, David, 355, 357, 362. versus the ‘Slimy Rattlenake’: The Rhetorical Melee of Daniel, Larry, 350-351. Ida B. Wells and Edward Carmack on the Subject of Darnell, Henry, 299. Lynching,” 311-332. Davis, Jefferson, 178, 245, 340, 356, 358. Carpenter, Edward Jenner, 97-98. Davis, Oroondates, 116. Carter, William Blount, 179. Delfino, Susanna, and Michele Gillespie, eds., Neither Lady Cartmell, Rovert H., 173-174. Nor Slave: Working Women of the Old South, noted 380. Cates, Charles T., 253. Deppisch, Ludwig M.: as contributor, 189; “Andrew Jackson Catron, John, 232. and American Medical Practice: Old Hickory and His “Cave Archaeology in the Eastern Woodlands,” special issue Physicians,” 130-151. of Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology, noted 379. Dickinson, Charles, 131, 134. Chamberlain, Charles D., Victory at Home: Manpower and Dickinson, W. Calvin, Jennie Ivey, and Lisa W. Rand, Race in the American South during World War II, noted Tennessee Tales the Textbooks Don’t Tell, rev. 377-378. PYinter 2003 > 2 7) Te, nnessee Stit.t a a.e . YD -W Quarle ily Dillahunty, Albert, 344. Federal Confiscation Act of 1861 Dismal Swamp Company, 114. Field, Stephen J., 123. Donaldson, Bettie Meriwether, 305. Fillmore, Millard, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231- Donaldson, Kate, 298, 307. Findley, John, 111. Donaldson, Wellington, 305. Fine, Elizabeth C., Soulstepping: African American Step Donelson, Andrew Jackson: 142; ‘“‘I Shall Persevere in the Shows, noted 382. Cause of Truth’: Andrew Jackson Donelson and the Finger, John R., Tennessee Frontiers: Three Regions in Election of 1856,” 219-238. Transition, rev. 282-284. Donelson, Daniel Smith, 180, 229, 233. Finley, Luke W., 253. Donelson, Elizabeth Martin Randolph, 221, 228. ***First Rate and Fashionable’: Handmade Nineteenth Century Donelson, Emily, 137. Furniture at the Tennessee State Museum,” 5-96. See Donelson, Jackson, 228. also: “Editor’s Introduction,” 3-4; “Apprenticeship: An Donelson, John, 5, 11, 117, 125. Example from Rural Massachusetts,” 97-100; Donelson, Mary Purnell, 50. “Identifying Early Furniture,” 101-104; and “Glossary,” Douglass, Frederick, 204 105-109. Dr. J. G. M. Ramsey: Autobiography and Letters, noted 381- Fisk, Moses, 122. 382. Fogg, Henry, 153, 160-163. DuBois, W.E.B., 312, 327. Foos, Paul, A Short, Offhand, Killing Affair: Soldiers and Dumont, Ebenezer, 179, 180. Social Conflict during the Mexican-American War, noted Duncan, William R., 247. 379-380. Dunglison, Robley, 142-144. Force, Manning F., 340. Durbin, Jeffrey L., revs. Franklin: Tennessee’s Handsomest Forrest, Nathan Bedford, 243. Town, A Bicentennial History, 1799-1999, 289-290. Forrester, R.C., Night Riders of Reelfoot Lake: The Untold Durham, Walter, and Glenda Milliken, eds., Gallatin 200: A Story, noted 381. Time Line History Celebrating the Bicentennial of Frank, Ed, revs. Jefferson Davis in Blue: The Life of Gallatin, Tennessee, noted 381. Sherman’s Relentless Warrior, 278-279. Dye, David H., revs. Choctaws in a Revolutionary Age, 1750- Franklin: Tennessee’s Handsomest Town, A_ Bicentennial 1830, 276-277. History, 1799-1999, rev. 289-290. Dyer, Frederick H., 167. Franklin, Benjamin, 133. E.T. Wickham: A Dream Unguarded, rev. 378-379. Franklin, Isaac: “The Troubled Legacy of Isaac Franklin: The East, Edward H., 253. Enterprise of Slave Trading,” 193-218. Eaton, John Henry, 220. Franklin, William, 207. Eder, Elizabeth K.: as contributor, 384; “To Sample Southern Franklin and Armfield, 193-198, 202-206, 212-213. Manners and the Plantation Way of Life: The Freedom’s Promise: Ex-Slave Families and Citizenship in the Experiences of Margaret Clark Griffis, A Northern Age of Emancipation, rev. 287-288. Teacher in Antebellum Tennessee,” 293-310. Fremont, John C., 230, 231-232. Edwards, Gary T., revs. The Rebuke of History: The Southern French, Lucy Virginia, 177. Agrarians and American Conservative Thought, 288-289 Fry, Joshua, 115-116. Eisenschiml, Otto, 344. Galbraith, William, 8, 13, 66. Ellis, Vespasian, 228. Gallatin 200: A Time Line History Celebrating the Elliston, Joseph T., 51. Bicentennial of Gallatin, Tennessee, noted 381. Engle, Stephen D., 351. Gardenshire, Erasmus, 254. Epperson, Richard, 198. Gardner, William, 23. Erwin, Andrew, 198-200. Gavin, Michael Thomas, revs. Black Soldiers in Blue: African Esselman, John N., 144-146. American Troops in the Civil War Era, 373-374. Estes, Bedford M., 361, 362. Gentry, Meredith P., 219, 226. Estes, Sarah J., 177. Gentsch, James F., 350. Estes, Jackson & McDavitt, 364. Gibson, Henry R., 245, 253. Ethridge, Emerson, 250. Giers, Carl C., 252. Ewing, Andrew, 226. Gillespie, Michelle, and Susanna Delfino, eds., Neither Lady Ewing, Edwin H., 153, 158-163, 241. Nor Slave: Working Women of the Old South, noted 380. Fairvue (plantation), 206-207, 210-212. God’s Capitalist: Asa Candler of Coca-Cola, rev. 374-375. Fanatics & Fire-eaters: Newspapers and the Coming of the Goss, John D., 41, 64. Civil War, noted 290-291. Grant, Ulysses S., 175, 177-178, 239, 333, 338-340, 344, 345, Featherstonhaugh, George, 194, 202-203. 346, 351, 361-362. DPDernter 2003 2 a , . . 7 (- Z —Ze+tstedAdee Hastorical Quarterly Green, Horace, 198, 199. Hughes, Jr., Nathaniel Cheairs, and Gordon D. Whitney, Griffis, John Limeburger, 295. Jefferson Davis in Blue: The Life of Sherman’s Relentless Griffis, Margaret Clark: “To Sample Southern Manners and Warrior, rev. 278-279; and Timothy D. Johnson, eds., A the Plantation Way of Life: The Experiences of Margaret Fighter From Way Back: The Mexican War Diary ofL t. Clark Griffis, A Northern Teacher in Antebellum Daniel Harvey Hill, noted 379. Tennessee,” 293-310. Humphreys, West H., 358, 359. Griffis, William Elliot, 294, 303. Hunter, John, 140. Gudmestad, Robert H.: as contributor, 292; revs. The Huntt, Henry, 135-137. Scalawags: Southern Dissenters in the Civil War and Hurst, Fielding, 175 Reconstruction, 279-280; “The Troubled Legacy of Isaac “*T Shall Persevere in the Cause of Truth’: Andrew Jackson Franklin: The Enterprise of Slave Trading,” 193-218. Donelson and the Election of 1856,” 219-238. Hall, James Crowdhill, 138-139. “Identifying Early Furniture,” 101-104. Halleck, Henry, 175 “In Service to the Confederacy: Howell Edmunds Jackson, Haley, James L., Sam Houston, rev. 285-286 West Tennessee’s Receiver of Sequestered Property, Hansbury and Crutchlow, 98. 1861-1862,” 355-365. Harlan, John Marshall, 123. Irwin, Ned: revs. Aaron Burr: Conspiracy to Treason, 284- Harris, Isham, 178, 179 285; revs. God’s Capitalist: Asa Candler of Coca-Cola, Harris, Thomas, 139. 374-375. Harrison, Benjamin Isler, John P., 294. Hatton, Robert S., 2 Isler, Margaret Meriwether, 294-301. Hays, Joseph, 146 Isler, R. R. Meriwether, 294. Hayes, Adelicia (later Franklin Acklen Cl -atham), 206-207. Isler, William B., 294 Henderson, Richard, 112, 114, 116, 125 Ivey, Jennie, W. Calvin Dickinson, and Lisa W. Rand, Henderson, Thomas, 139. Tennessee Tales the Textbooks Don't Tell, rev. 377-378. Henderson and Company, 114. Jackson, Alexander, 358. Henry, Gustavus, 241. Jackson, Andrew: 219, 362; “Andrew Jackson and American “Henry Maney Revisited,” 152-165. Medical Practice: Old Hickory and His Physicians,” 130- Hesseltine, William B., ed., Dr. J. G. M. Ramsey: 151; and slave trading, 198-201; The Passions of Andrew Autobiography and Letters, noted 3 Jackson, rev. 366-373. Hicks, James G., 5, 7, 20-21, 69, 98. Jackson, Elizabeth Hutchinson, 131. Hill, Thomas, 60. Jackson, Howell E.: 123; “In Service to the Confederacy: Hill, Jr., W.B., 269 Howell Edmunds Jackson, West Tennessee’s Receiver of “Historians and the Battle of Shiloh: One Hundred and Forty Sequestered Property, 1861-1862,” 355-365. Years of Controversy,” 333-354 Jackson, Rachel Donelson, 135, 138, 146, 221. History of Washington County, Tenness v. 375-377 Jackson, Robert, 131. Hobbs, W.W., 247 Jackson, Jr., Andrew, 229. Hodges, J.C., 246 Jackson press, 8, 47-48, 86. Holder, Tryphena Blanche, 298. Jamison, James H., 253. Holding, Samuel S., 6, 17-18, 68. Jefferson, Peter, 112, 115-116. Holladay, Robert, and James A. Crutchfield, Franklin: Jefferson, Thomas, 119, 125, 142. Tennessee's Handsomest Town, A | entennial History, Jefferson Davis in Blue: The Life of Sherman’s Relentless 1799-1999, rev. 289-290. Warrior, rev. 278-279. Holmes, Jr., Oliver Wendell, 123. Johnny Green of the Orphan Brigade: The Journal of a Hopkins, Jason, 11. Confederate Soldier, noted 380. Houston, Benjamin, revs. The Sporting V d of the Modern Johnson, Andrew: 49, 52, 173, 179, 180, 219, 225, 228-229, South, 281-282 233; “The Press and the Legislature: Andrew Johnson’s Houston, James B., 8. Election to the U.S. Senate in 1875,” 239-258; 358. Houston, Sam: rev. 285-286. Johnson, Cave, 220, 225. Hovey, Alvin P., 180. Johnson, Peter, 122. Howell, R.B.C., 180. Johnson, Timothy D., and Nathaniel Cheairs Hughes, Jr., eds., Hudspeth, Harvey Gresham: as contributor, 384; “In Service A Fighter From Way Back: The Mexican War Diary ofL t. to the Confederacy: Howell Edmunds Jackson, West Daniel Harvey Hill, noted 379. Tennessee’s Receiver of Sequestered Property, 1861- Johnson, William, 52-53. 1862,” 355-365. Johnston, Albert Sidney, Hughes, John, 111. Johnston, William Preston, 334, 339, 346, 348. 388 DYlnter 2003 2 y Lennessee Slistori ailW Duarte l,e Jones, James, 242. McCarmack, John W., 250. Jones, Lu Ann, Mama Learned Us to Work: Farm Women in McCauley, Deborah V., and Laura E. Potter, Mountain the New South, rev. 280-281. Holiness: A Photographic Narrative, noted 382-383. Jones, Robert B.: as contributor, 292; “The Press and the McClernand, John A., 175. Legislature: Andrew Johnson’s Election to the U.S. McCombs, James W., 8. Senate in 1875,” 239-258. McCutcheon, John, 11. Jones, Jr., James B.: as contributor, 189; “The Civil War in McDonough, James Lee, 344-346. Tennessee: New Perspectives on Familiar Materials,” McGavock, Randall, 153, 158-163, 228. 166-187. McMillin, Benton, 252-253. Keating, John M., 243. McNairy, Boyd, 198. Kellar, Andrew J., 243. Madison, James, 144. Kemble, Frances Anne “Fannie,” 38-39, 43. Mama Learned Us to Work: Farm Women in the New South, Kemp, Kathryn W., God's Capitalist: Asa Candler of Coca- rev. 280-281. Cola, rev. 374-375. Maney, Ann Rebecca Southall, 153. Kendall, Amos, 229. Maney, George, 153. Ker, David Corbin, 135. Maney, Henry: “Henry Maney Revisited,” 152-165. Kerr, James, 116. Maney, James, 153. Kimberly, Elizabeth Maney, 153. Maney, Rebecca, 156. Kimberly, John, 155, 156. Maney, Thomas, 153. Kirwan, A. D., ed., Johnny Green of the Orphan Brigade: The Marchbanks, A. J., 180. Journal ofa Confederate Soldier, noted 380. Marshall, Christine Cole, and Joy Marshall, With Good Will Know-Nothing Party, 219, 221-233. and Affection .. . for Antioch: Reminiscences of Antioch, Knowles, Susan, ed., E.T. Wickham: A Dream Unguarded, Tennessee, noted 382. rev. 378-379. Marshall, John, 140. Kuhn, Adam, 140. Martin, Joseph, 122. Lacy, A.J., 170. Marzalek, John F., ed., The Civil War in the Western Theater: Lamont, Daniel S., 342. 178 Annual Mississippi State University History Forum, Lanier, Robert, 269. rev. 286-287. Lassiter, Luke Eric, and Celeste Ray, eds., Signifying Serpents Mathes, James H., 252. and Mardi Gras Runners: Representing Identity in May, Francis, 134-135. Selected Souths, noted 291. Maynard, Horace, 239, 241, 358. Lawless, Henry, 111. Mayre, L.S., 242. Lawson, Thomas, 137. M’Dowell, Calvin, 311, 317, 319, 325. Lea, John M., 247, 253. Meacham, Milton S., 42. Leavitt, Joseph, 204. Melton, Jr., Buckner F., Aaron Burr: Conspiracy to Treason, Lewis, Jim, revs. The Civil War in the Western Theater: 17* rev. 284-285. Annual Mississippi State University History Forum, 286- Meriwether, Elizabeth Rivers, 294, 305. 287 Meriwether, Richard Terrell, 294, 305. Lewis, Wheeler, 51, 90. Meriwether Plantation, 295-303. Lewis, William B., 220. Michie, James, 117. Lincoln, Mordecai, 49. Midcontinental Journal of Archaelogy, noted 379. Lindsley, Philip, 155. Miller, John.D., 5, 43, 84. Lonas, John, 36. Miller, Patrick D., ed., The Sporting World of the Modern Long, E.B., 167. South, rev. 281-282. Long, Michael E., revs. Peace and War on the Anglo- Miller v. Wills, 123-125. Cherokee Frontier, 1756-1763, 274-276. Milliken, Glenda, and Walter Durham, eds., Gallatin 200: A Loyal Company, I11, 114, 115. Time Line History Celebrating the Bicentennial of Lynch, Charles, 314. Gallatin, Tennessee, noted 381. McAdoo, James C., 15. Milroy, R.H., 180, 181. McAdoo, Samuel, 6, 15. Mitchell, James M., 253. McAffrey, Terrence, 38. Monroe, James, 138. McBean, Daniel, 7, 28. Moran, Charles, 98-99. McBride, Joseph, 7, 11, 65. Moran, Jeffrey P., The Scopes Trial: A Brief History with McBride, Robert, 249. Documents, noted 290. McCardle, Eliza, 49. 52. Morgan, Nancy, revs. History of Washington County, Winter 2003 389 ; ‘ A Heh a7i e () Lennessee Stitta sill Daa ile ly Tennessee, 375-377 Pride, Richard A., The Political Use of Racial Narratives: Moscowitz, Henry, 312 School Desegregation in Mobile, Alabama, 1954-1997, Moseley, Ronald, ed., The Stilwell Letters: A Georgian in noted 383. Longstreet’s Corps, Army of Northern Virginia, noted Priest, Eugene, 169. 290. Price, James, 153, 158-163. Moss, Tom, 311, 317, 319, 325. Primm, Stanley, 269. Mountain Holiness: A Photographic N. ative, noted 382- Proctor, Nicolas W., Bathed in Blood: Hunting and Mastery in 383. the Old South, noted 380. Murphy, Paul V., The Rebuke of History: The Southern Quarles, James, 15, 67. Agrarians and American Conservative Thought, rev. Quarles, John B., 15, 67. 288-289. Quarles, Roger, 15. Nast, Thomas, 246 Quarles, William A., 241 Neal, John R., 254 Rand, Lisa W., Jennie Ivey, and W. Calvin Dickinson, Neither Lady Nor Slave: Working Wome f the Old South, Tennessee Tales the Textbooks Don't Tell, rev. 377-378. noted 380 Ratner, Lorman A., and Dwight L. Teeter, Jr., Fanatics & Nevill, Louise, 307. Fire-eaters: Newspapers and the Coming of the Civil Newbern, David J., 247 War, noted 290-291. Nicholson, A.O.P., 225, 228, 233. Ray, Celeste, and Luke Eric Lassiter, eds., Signifying Serpents Night Riders of Reelfoot Lake: The Unt Story, noted 381. and Mardi Gras Runners: Representing Identity in O’Brien, Greg, Choctaws in a Revolution Age, 1750-1830, Selected Souths, noted 291. rev. 276-277. Ray, Kristofer, revs. Tennessee Frontiers: Three Regions in Oliphant, John, Peace and War on {nglo-Cherokee Transition, 282-284. Frontier, 1756-1763, rev. 274-276. Rayner, Kenneth, 228. Otey, James, 153. Reece, Lewie, revs. Freedom’s Promise: Ex-Slave Families Outhwaite, Joseph H and Citizenship in the Age of Emancipation. Overton, John, 251. Reed, David, 341-344, 351. Ovington, Mary White, 312. Reed School of Shiloh history, 341-346. Owens, Anne-Leslie, revs. E.T. Wickham: A Dream Reeves, Elbert, 241-242. Uneguarded, 378-379. Revisionist School of Shiloh history, 348. Paine, Thomas H., 249. Rice, DeLong, 344. Parrish, Frank, 153, 160-163. Reid, Debra A., revs. Mama Learned Us to Work: Farm Parton, James, 138. Women in the New South, 280-281. Patterson, Martha, 242. Reid, Whitelaw, 334. Patterson, Robert, 166. Regosin, Elizabeth, Freedom’s Promise: Ex-Slave Families Patton, David, 8, and Citizenship in the Age of Emancipation, rev. 287- Patton, James, 11 l. 288. Patton, Samuel, 3. Ritchie, Thomas, 220. Patton, William, 22-23, 71. Rives, John C., 225. Peace and War on the Anglo-Cherokee Frontier, 1756-1763, Robertson, Felix, 134, 145-146. rev. 274-276. Robertson, James, 117, 119. Physick, Philip Synge, 134, 137, 139-142. Robison, Dan M., 249. Pierce, Franklin, 221, 358. Roland, Charles P., 346, 348. Pillow, Gideon J., 170, 219, 226. Rose, John Erhart, 4, 9, 36-39, 81. Pohl, Andrew, 28. Rose, Mark A.: as contributor, 292; “The Nashville Tornado Polk, James K., 146, 219, 220. of March 14, 1933,” 265-273. Pollard, Edward, 357. Ross; LF, 175: Porter, James D., 245. Rousch, John A., 252. Porter, Nimrod, 170. Routh, Francis, 206. Potter, Laura E., and Deborah V. McCauley, Mountain Ruggles, Daniel, 348, 349, 350-351. Holiness: A Photographic Narrative, noted 382-383. Rush, Benjamin, 132, 133-134, 135, 139, 140. Poyner, Richard, 7, 42, 83. Rutledge, George, 122. Poyner, Robert, 7. Sam Houston, rev. 285-286. Powell, Ambrose, 111. Sames, James W., 117. Powell, J.L., 269. Saunders, Jordan, 197. Prentiss, Benjamin, 338, 344. Savage, John H., 241, 243. 390 DYister 2003 = 2 2 Tennessee Stitta jiiinlllQ Wuarle ily Seddon, James, 178. far, noted 290-291. Senter, DeWitt C., 239. Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area, 182. Sevier, John, 122, 125. Tennessee Frontiers: Three Regions in Transition, rev. 282- Sevier, Valentine, 117. 284. Shelby, Isaac, 115. Tennessee General Assembly: “The Press and the Legislature: Sherman, William T., 175, 334, 338, 340, 344, 346. Andrew Johnson’s Election to the U.S. Senate in 1875,” Sherwood, Sarah C., and Jan F. Simek, eds., “Cave 239-258. Archaeology in the Eastern Woodlands,” special issue of Tennessee Historical Society: Battle of Nashville Symposium Midcontinental Journal of Archaelogy, noted 379. call for papers, 190-191; fall programs, 192; Trial and Sherwood and Dodd, 48. Triumph: Essays in Tennessee’s African-American Shiloh, Battle of: “Historians and the Battle of Shiloh: One History, 193. Hundred and Forty Years of Controversy,” 333-354. Tennessee Medical Society, 145, 146, 147. Shiloh National Military Park: “Historians and the Battle of Tennessee Tales the Textbooks Don’t Tell, rev. 377-378. Shiloh: One Hundred and Forty Years of Controversy,” “The Civil War in Tennessee: New Perspectives on Familiar Materials,” 166-187. Signifying Serpents and Mardi Gras Runners: Representing The Civil War in the Western Theater: 17*" Annual Identity in Selected Souths, noted 291. Mississippi State University History Forum, rev. 286- Sim, Thomas, 137-138. 287. Simek, Jan F., and Sarah C. Sherwood, eds., “Cave “The Nashville Tornado of March 14, 1933,” 265-273. Archaeology in the Eastern Woodlands,” special issue of The Passions of Andrew Jackson, rev. 366-373. Midcontinental Journal of Archaelogy, noted 379. The Political Use of Racial Narratives: School Desegregation Simpson, Samuel Robert, 61-62, 96. in Mobile, Alabama, 1954-1997, noted 383. Slatter, Hope, 202. “The Press and the Legislature: Andrew Johnson’s Election to Slave Pen Prison, 212-213. the U.S. Senate in 1875,” 239-258. Smith, Clement, 135. The Rebuke of History: The Southern Agrarians and Smith, Daniel, 112, 115-119, 125. American Conservative Thought, rev. 288-289. Smith, David Ray, revs. Tennessee Tales the Textbooks Don't “The ‘Saddle-Colored Sapphira’ versus the ‘Slimy Tell, 377-378. Rattlenake’: The Rhetorical Melee of Ida B. Wells and Smith, Frank, 269. Edward Carmack on the Subject of Lynching,” 311-332. Smith, John David, ed., Black Soldiers in Blue: African The Scalawags: Southern Dissenters in the Civil War and American Troops in the Civil War Era, rev. 373-374. Reconstruction, rev. 279-280. Smith, P.J., 250. The Scopes Trial: A Brief History with Documents, noted 290. Smith, Timothy B.: as contributor, 384; “Historians and the The Sporting World of the Modern South, rev. 281-282. Battle of Shiloh: One Hundred and Forty Years of “The State of Tennessee: As Seen by Traugott Bromme,” 259- Controversy,” 333-354. 264. Smith, William Bailey, 116, 117. The Stilwell Letters: A Georgian in Longstreet’s Corps, Army Soulstepping: African American Step Shows, noted 382. of Northern Virginia, noted 290. Southall, Martha Frances, 155. “The Troubled Legacy of Isaac Franklin: The Enterprise of Southern Methodist Publishing House, 171. Slave Trading,” 193-218. Spears, Napoleon, 245. “The Virginia-Tennessee Boundary: The Walker Line?,” 110- Spence, John C., 3. 129. Stalnaker, Samuel, 111. They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the American Stevens, Thaddeus, 356. Civil War, rev. 277-278. Stevens, William H., 241 Tipton, Alcesta, 307. Stewart, Will, 311, 317, 319. Thomas, George H., 173. Stull, Frank, 270. Thomas, Jane, 58. Sugar chest, 8, 76. Thompson, Pauline, 305. Sumner, Charles, 230. Tipton, William, 305. Swan, William, 178. Titus Woods & Co., 40. Sword, Wiley, 346-348. “To Sample Southern Manners and the Plantation Way of Sword School of Shiloh history, 346-348, 350. Life: The Experiences of Margaret Clark Griffis, A Taylor, Alfred A., 253. Northern Teacher in Antebellum Tennessee,” 293-310. Taylor, Creed, 122. Tomlinson, William, 111. Teeter, Jr., Dwight L., and Lorman A. Ratner, Fanatics & Transylvania Purchase, 114. Fire-eaters: Newspapers and the Coming of the Civil Trial and Triumph: Essays in Tennessee’s African-American Dinter 2003 391 2 Va 5" nd ° ° “4 J _Lenmneddsee Sls lo ia anww drle ily History, 193. eaters: Newspapers and the Coming of the Civil War, Trist, Nicholas, 144. 290-291; Gallatin 200: A Time Line History Celebrating Troost, Gerard, 48. the Bicentennial of Gallatin, Tennessee, 381; Johnny Tulip Grove (plantation), 221-223. Green of the Orphan Brigade: The Journal of a Turney, Peter, 242. Confederate Soldier, 380; Mountain Holiness: A Photo- Tyler, John, 139. graphic Narrative, 382-383; Neither Lady Nor Slave: United States Colored Troops, 173. Working Women of the Old South, 380; Night Riders of United States Supreme Court, 121-125, 355. Reelfoot Lake: The Untold Story, 381; Signifying Van Buren, Martin, 220. Serpents and Mardi Gras Runners: Representing Identity Van Zelm, Antoinette, revs. They Fought Like Demons: in Selected Souths, 291; Soulstepping: African American Women Soldiers in the American Ci War, 277-278. Step Shows, 382; The Political Use of Racial Narratives: Veterans’ School of Shiloh history, 334-341. School Desegregation in Mobile, Alabama, 1954-1997, Victory at Home: Manpower and Race e American South 383; The Scopes Trial: A Brief History with Documents, during World War II, noted 291. 290, The Stilwell Letters: A Georgian in Longstreet’s Villiard, Oswald Garrison, 312. Corps, Army of Northern Virginia, 290, Victory at Home: Virginia v Tennessee, 121-1235. Manpower and Race in the American South during World Virginia-Tennessee boundary: see “The Virginia-Tennessee War II, 291.; ed., Trial and Triumph: Essays in Boundary: The Walker Line?,” 110-129. Tennessee’s African-American History, 193; and With Walker, Lee, 321. Good Will and Affection . . . for Antioch: Reminiscences Walker, Thomas, 111-119, 125. of Antioch, Tennessee, 382. Wallace, Lew, 338, 340. White, Lisa A.: as contributor, 384; “The ‘Saddle-Colored Walling, William English, 312. Sapphira’ versus the ‘Slimy Rattlenake’: The Rhetorical Walton, Emily Donelson, 50. Melee of Ida B. Wells and Edward Carmack on the Warner, Seth: as contributor, 189; “Henry Maney Revisited,” Subject of Lynching,” 311-332. 152-165. White, Walter, 327. Warren, James, 19. Whitney, Gordon D., and Nathaniel Cheairs Hughes, Jr., Warren, John Collins, 141-142. Jefferson Davis in Blue: The Life of Sherman’s Relentless Warshauer, Matthew, revs. The Passions Andrew Jackson, Warrior, rev. 278-279. 366-373. Wickham, E.T.: E.T. Wickham: A Dream Unguarded, rev. Waters, John, 146-147. 378-379. Waters, Lydia, 146. “Wilburforce,” 200-201. Webb, Thomas G., 30. Williams, John, 116, 117. Webster, Daniel, 227. Williams v. Bruffy, 364. Welch, Thomas, 27, 30, 59. Williamson, Roger, M., 268, 272. Weldon, Daniel, 116. Wilson, Ewing A., 251. Wellford, Harry W.: as contributor, 189; “The Virginia- Wilson, Henry, 249. Tennessee Boundary: The Walker Line?,” 110-129. Wilson, R.A., 270-272. Wells, Ida B.: “The ‘Saddle-Colored Sapphira’ versus the With Good Will and Affection . . . for Antioch: Reminiscences ‘Slimy Rattlenake’: The Rhetorical Melee of Ida B. Wells of Antioch, Tennessee, noted 382. and Edward Carmack on the Subject of Lynching,” 311- Wolfe, John, 58, 95. 352. Wolfe, John Bunyan, 58. West, Carrol Van: “Editor’s Introduction,” 3-4; notes A Wolfe Brothers Furniture, 58. Fighter From Way Back: The Mexican War Diary of Lt. Wood, James, 111. Daniel Harvey Hill, 379; A Hard Trip: A History of the Woolfolk, Austin, 197, 203, 204. Woodruff, Nan E., American Congo: The African American psth Mississippi Infantry, CSA., 380-381; A Short, Offhand, Killing Affair: Soldiers and Social Conflict dur- Freedom Struggle in the Delta, noted 382. ing the Mexican-American War, 379-380; American Wynne, Ben, A Hard Trip: A History of the psth Mississippi Congo: The African American Freedom Struggle in the Infantry, CSA., noted 380-381. Delta, 382; Bathed in Blood: Hunting and Mastery in the Old South, 380; Bluegrass Breakdown: The Making of the Old Southern Sound, 383; “Cave Archaeology in the Eastern Woodlands,” special issue of Midcontinental Journal of Archaelogy, 379; Dr. J. G. M. Ramsey: Autobiography and Letters, 381-382; Fanatics & Fire- PYinter 2003

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