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American Civil War
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The American Civil War ranks among the most studied events in United States history, making it a central subject in courses on American history, military history, political economy, and cultural studies. The conflict touches nearly every dimension of nineteenth-century American life — slavery, federal versus state authority, economic transformation, and national identity — giving it lasting analytical weight. Papers on this topic often engage with the war's long-term causes, its conduct, and its consequences for the Union, the Confederacy, and the South's economic order.

Student papers on this subject take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on military figures and campaigns, examining commanders like James Longstreet or specific engagements such as Fredericksburg and Sherman's march from Atlanta to the sea. Others pursue historical causation, arguing, as some papers do, that the founding of the United States itself contained the seeds of the Civil War. Literary and film analysis also appears, with works like the 1934 film Judge Priest used to trace how the conflict shaped cultural memory. Policy and political economy angles address slavery, the divergence between Northern and Southern economies, and the war's role in originating modern warfare tactics and organization.

A strong essay on the Civil War requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad narrative survey. Evidence drawn from primary sources — battle records, political speeches, economic data — carries more weight than general claims. One common pitfall is treating the war's causes as either purely economic or purely moral; the most persuasive essays recognize how slavery, political economy, and constitutional conflict were deeply intertwined forces driving the nation toward war.

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Paper Doctorate
Ancient Rome and Caesar's Gallic campaigns
Julius Caesar was an ambitious and ruthless man. He did not begin by attempting to conquer the world, as had Alexander the Great[footnoteRef:1], but he did have the political ambition to at least rule the Roman state as…
Research Paper Doctorate
Harriet Beecher Stowe When President
When President Abraham Lincoln met her in 1862, he gazed upon the petite woman who stood less than five feet in height, remarking, "So you're the little woman who wrote the book that started this great war." He was, of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Aircraft and Warfare: From Hot Air Balloons to Modern Air Power
Few technologies have so dramatically transformed the nature of human warfare as aircraft. As early as the late eighteenth century, aviation technologies have been used with a high degree of success in military…
Research Paper Doctorate
Government Intervention in the Steel Industry 2002
The Bush administration announced the imposition of sweeping tariffs of up to 30% on steel imports to the United States for a period of 3 years in March 2002 purportedly to save the ailing steel industry from collapsing.
Paper Doctorate
Role of General Robert E. Lee at the Battle of Antietam
This paper provides a review of the relevant peer-reviewed and scholarly literature concerning the Battle of Antietam to determine what happened and what the consequences of the Battle of Antietam were for the United States, including its background, the events of the battle and its long-term implications. A summary of the research and important findings are presented in the conclusion.
Research Paper Doctorate
Why the American Civil War Was Inevitable: Key Causes
American Civil War marked the end of centuries old practice of slavery. It also turned North into a more progressive and advanced power and brought an end to the agricultural supremacy of South.
Paper Doctorate
Thomas Meshak Thomas Mrs. Lauber English IV
This paper discusses the government and how it spends its money. Income comes to the government in the form of taxes. From this money, the government spends on things which it needs including paying for the education of the citizens and welfare. This is a time of economic crisis and this has led to people being more aware of how the government spends money.
Paper Undergraduate
First Manassas How the Skirmish at Blackburn\'s Ford Shaped the Battle
How the Skirmish at Blackburn's Ford Shaped the Battle of First Manassas The Skirmish at Blackburn's Ford shaped the Battle of First Manassas by discouraging the Union Army, altering the Union Army's battle plans and encouraging the Confederate Army. The Confederacy's chances of successfully seceding from the Union were initially poor, as the Union had the obvious upper hand: the Union Army was considerably larger and better equipped; their commander was George McClellan, whose abilities were undoubted; the Union had the international advantage of being a recognized nation; finally, the Union had the lion's share of factories that could steadily mass produce ordnance for the Union forces. In sharp contrast, the Confederacy: was an agrarian society with far fewer people, fewer factories and considerable resentment at being reduced to "economic vassalage" by the North's industrialization; much of the Confederacy's fortune involved cotton and the reliance of foreign markets on that cotton; the Confederate Army was significantly composed of farmers who were eager to finish the war and get back home by Autumn for the harvest; Confederacy's first days were quite shaky, with anti-secessionist cabinet members, no established office space, little money even for its cabinet's office furniture, and continued reliance on the North for even Confederate currency. Clearly the Union was at least theoretically far likelier to win the Civil War. Understandably confident, the initially planned frontal attacks on Confederate forces. Fortunately for the Confederacy, the Skirmish at Blackburn's Ford deeply affected First Manassas. The untested Union forces, determined and resourceful Southern forces, and outcome of a Skirmish that consisted of relatively equal damage on both sides combined for the South and against the North. Seen as a humiliating defeat for Union forces, the Skirmish at Blackburn's Ford succeeded in significantly altered both sides' approach to First Manassas. Though casualties were mutually light, Union confidence was considerably shaken. In addition, due to the Union failure at the Skirmish, Union McDowell decided against a frontal assault and opted to cross Bull Run Creek farther upstream, beyond the Confederate left flank, which ultimately allowed the Confederacy to withstand the Union onslaught, regroup and counterattack at First Manassas. Finally, Confederate leadership, Confederate forces and the people they represented all gained a significant amount of confidence from the Skirmish, assisting them in withstanding, counterattacking and ultimately winning at First Manassas. All these factors stemming from the Skirmish at Blackburn's Ford ultimately lead to a debilitating a defeat at First Manassas. Thus the Confederate victory at the Skirmish at Blackburn's Ford and the eventual Confederate at First Manassas led to wildly diverging reactions on each side of the conflict. Aptly representing the Confederate reaction to the Skirmish and First Manassas, Confederate President Jefferson Davis publicly boasted that the Confederate Army "has met the grand army of the enemy, routed it at every point, and it now flies, inglorious in retreat before our victorious columns." Meanwhile, an influential voice for Union abolitionists, New York editor Horace Greeley, performed a nearly 180 degree reversal of his prior strident stance and began to call for a speedy peace with the Confederacy. These representative Confederate and Union responses to the Skirmish and eventual First Manassas show the profound effects enjoyed by the Confederacy and suffered by the Union.
Research Paper Undergraduate
History of Nursing: Key Milestones and Theories
This paper is composed of a timeline of important events in the history of nursing. It begins with Florence Nightingale and her concept of the 'canons' of nursing. It chronicles the development of nursing into a respectable profession after the American Civil War and identifies the theoretical milestones that have contributed to the construction of nursing as a unique profession.
Research Paper Doctorate
18th and 19th Century
¶ … eighteenth and nineteenth centuries saw change of a manner and magnitude never before experienced in world history. Technological, governmental, and ideological transformations made the nineteenth century span the…