Tributes to the Past, Present, and Future: Confederate Memorialization in Virginia, 1914-1919
Between 1914 and 1919, elite white people erected monuments across Virginia, permanently transforming the landscape of their communities with memorials to the Confederacy. Why did these Confederate memorialists continue to build monuments to a conflict their side had lost half a century earlier? Thi...
Main Author: | Seabrook, Thomas Rudolph |
---|---|
Other Authors: | History |
Format: | Others |
Published: |
Virginia Tech
2015
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10919/52895 |
Similar Items
-
Confederate Prisons
by: Wall, Betty Jo
Published: (1954) -
God of Our Fathers: Catholic Chaplains in the Confederate Armies
by: McCall, Gary W.
Published: (2010) -
Aaron J. Cohen, War Monuments, Public Patriotism, and Bereavement in Russia, 1905-2015
by: Adrienne M. Harris
Published: (2021-03-01) -
Première Guerre mondiale et monuments historiques
by: Marc Botlan, et al.
Published: (2014-12-01) -
Confederate War Grief Transformed: the Openness of Memorials to New Meanings
by: Phoebe Crisman
Published: (2018-07-01)