The contrast in personalities between Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday energizes their legend but leaves unanswered how two such different men could become friends in the first place.
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Where Abraham Lincoln Went to Cry
IN THE SUMMER OF 1862—a season she called a “fiery furnace of affliction” following […]
D-Day Through a German Lens
On D-Day, June 6, 1944, the Germans botched their chance to defeat the Allies, and, in the end, the invaders moved in on them permanently
Grant Takes on the Klan
Ulysses Grant hadn’t expected the presidency to be easy, but he didn’t think it […]
‘Terrible Has Been the Storm’
William T. Sherman’s own soldiers were shocked by the destruction they left behind in […]
CWT Book Review: Second Manassas
Second Manassas: Longstreet’s Attack and the Struggle for Chinn Ridge Scott C. Patchan; Potomac […]
Miss Alcott Goes to War
Eager to support the North, the budding author volunteered for a fledgling corps of female nurses.
John Singleton Mosby’s Accidental Courage
The Confederate’s exploits at Aldie Mill cemented his legend.
Interview: Tony Horwitz / John Brown and His American Ideals
Horwitz explores the surprising backstory of one of America’s most controversial figures.
CWT Book Review: Sailor’s Creek
Sailor’s Creek: Major General G.W. Custis Lee, Captured With Controversy Frank Everett White Jr.; […]
