Andrew Haughton received his PhD. from the Department of War Studies, King’s College London, in 1998. He has written several articles on Civil War strategy and tactics, and in 2000 published Training, Tactics, and Leadership in the Confederate Army of Tennessee. He is working as a strategy consultant for Deloitte. Bruce Levine received his doctorate at the University of Rochester, where he studied under the late Herbert G. Gutman. He holds the JG. Randall Distinguished Professorship in History at the University of Illinois. Levine’s books include The Spirit of 1848: German Immigrants, Labor Conflict, and the Coming of Civil War (1992) and Half Slave and Half Free The Roots of Civil War (1992, 2005). His chapter in the present volume was an early expression of a project that eventually yielded Confederate Emancipation: Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves during the Civil War (2005), which won the Peter Seaborg Award for Civil War Scholarship. Levine is now writing a book tentatively entitled The Fall of the House of Dixie The Confederacy’s Defeat and Slavery’s Destruction. Patricia Lucie is a Research Fellow in History at the University of Glasgow, where she was formerly a lecturer in the School of Law. Her PhD. was published in 1984 as Freedom and Federalism Congress and Courts, 1861–1866, and she has contributed articles on the Civil War to Civil War History, the Journal of American Studies, the Juridical Review and the Syracuse Law Review. Her most recent publications are The Enduring Significance of the Civil War Constitutional Amendments in Susan-Mary Grant and Peter J. Parish, eds, Legacy of Disunion (2003), “Scotland’s Conscientious Objectors in Fact and Fiction Saints or Cissies?” Scotia (2004), and “The Sinner and the Phrenologist Davey Haggart meets George Combe,” Journal of Scottish Historical Studies (2007).
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