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C-SPAN videos

Retired Marine Corps Colonel Michael Becker described the communication and deployment challenges of joint Army and Navy operations during the Civil War.

Denison University professor Julie Mujic talks about the opposing political viewpoints of Midwestern youth during the Civil War.

Civil War historian George Rable discusses the relationship between Abraham Lincoln and General George McClellan. 

Historian Angela Esco Elder recounts researching and editing the courtship letters between Nathaniel Dawson and Elodie Todd, the sister of Mary Todd Lincoln.

U.S. Army War College professor Christian Keller talks about the partnership between Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson.

Davidson College professor Hilary Green talked about how the African American porch and other communal gathering places allowed Black communities to remember the Civil War in complex ways.

U.S. Naval Academy professor Wayne Hsieh described how Civil War generals were able to see aerial views of the battlefield for the first time through military balloons and how they could communicate between widely dispersed troops via the telegram.

Virginia Center for Civil War Studies director Paul Quigley talked about the role newspapers played in dispersing information and serving as a forum for the national debate over slavery in antebellum America.

Author Tom Wheeler talks about how Abraham Lincoln used the new technology of the telegraph to communicate directly with his Union generals and helped win the Civil War.

How much did Union and Confederate soldiers talk to each other and even share tobacco and newspapers? More than you might think! “Friendly Enemies” author Lauren Thompson gives a talk on how soldiers shared information across the lines.

Historian Barbara Gannon talks about how Civil War photographs brought the horrors of the battlefront to Americans at home, but also described the wide range of scenes and subjects available for purchase as stereoview sets during the time.

Historian William “Jack” Davis talks about former Vice President and later Confederate General John Breckinridge’s escape to Cuba after the collapse of the Confederacy in 1865. 

Virginia Center for Civil War Studies director Paul Quigley talks about the soldier experience during the 1862 Peninsula Campaign, a Union attempt to capture the Confederate capitol of Richmond. 

Historian Garry Adelman uses stories and Civil War photography to talk about the ways people experienced the war depending on where they were and how they traveled.

Norfolk State University professor Cassandra Newby-Alexander talks about African Americans in Hampton Roads, Virginia during the Civil War. She describes how escaped slaves found refuge and freedom at the Union-held Fort Monroe.

Historian Ted Widmer traces Abraham Lincoln’s trip to Washington through a divided country before his inauguration in 1861. 

Historians discuss soldier recruitment, forced labor and the use of horses and mules during the Civil War. 

Civil War scholars talk about changes in technology during the Civil War, including the mass production of uniforms, guns and ammunition.

Historian Lorien Foote talks about how both sides during the Civil War accused the other of being uncivilized and employing retaliatory tactics. 

During the Civil War, members of the Choctaws Nation held slaves and fought alongside Confederate forces. Author Fay Yarborough talks about Native populations, slavery, and the Confederacy.

Augusta University Professor Holly Pinheiro talks about Black Civil War soldiers and their families in Philadelphia, as well as about his research in newspaper and pension records for his forthcoming book on the subject.

Historians address ways the American public coped with the Civil War – by seeking information, writing letters and sharing memories.

Virginia Tech professor Paul Quigley discusses President Abraham Lincoln’s shifting policies on emancipation during the Civil War. 

Caroline Wood Newhall, a postdoctoral fellow at the Virginia Center for Civil War Studies, discusses her research on black prisoners of war in the Confederacy. She talks about the misconception that all captured African American troops were executed and described how many were instead enslaved, including those born free in the North.

Southern Utah University Professor Laura June Davis talks about Confederate boat burners and naval guerrilla action on the lower Mississippi River during the last years of the Civil War. She describes how after the fall of Vicksburg in 1863, clandestine Confederate forces targeted commercial steamboats in order to disrupt Union supplies and cause panic in the North.

Hampden-Sydney College Professor Matthew Hulbert looks at depictions of slavery in Hollywood films ranging from Birth of a Nation and Gone with the Wind to Django Unchained and Free State of Jones. He talks about how early films glorified the Lost Cause myth and argues that while recent films show the horrors of the slave trade and resistance by enslaved people, the idea of the white savior is often still central to the narrative.

Jonathan Jones of Penn State University talks about widespread opiate addiction among Civil War veterans. He explains how prescribing opium and morphine — common treatments used for wartime injuries — grew into lifelong drug dependence for many.