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Category Modern History

18th century to the 20th century.

The New York City Draft Riots, July 13–16, 1863

The New York Draft Riots Chaos Strikes North

On the morning of July 13, 1863, a draft protest at the federal Provost Marshal's office on Third Avenue turned into the largest civil insurrection in US history apart from the Civil War. Over four days, the Colored Orphan Asylum was burned, at least eleven Black men were lynched, and 4,000 federal troops were redirected from Gettysburg to retake the city. Here is what happened.

Letters Home from the American Civil War

American Civil War Love & Loss

On July 14, 1861, Major Sullivan Ballou wrote to his wife Sarah from Camp Clark: "If I do not return, my dear Sarah, never forget how much I love you." Seven days later he was shot at Bull Run. Roughly 750,000 soldiers died in the war his letter introduces. This is how Americans learned of it — through the letters, photographs, and cemeteries the war forced them to invent.

Clara Barton: From Patent Office Clerk to Founder of the American Red Cross

Clara Barton's Love Lost

At Antietam on September 17, 1862, a Confederate bullet passed through Clara Barton's sleeve and killed the soldier she was tending. She never noticed. By the time she died fifty years later, she had identified 22,000 missing Union dead, helped found Andersonville National Cemetery, and built the American Red Cross from a Washington boarding house. This is the actual life behind the legend.

The Lost Cause: How Defeated Confederates Won the Memory War

The Lost Cause Myth A Powerful Lie

In 1861, Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens told the world the Confederacy's cornerstone was the inequality of the races and the natural condition of slavery. Within a decade, his side was working to rewrite what he had said. The result is the most successful effort to rewrite a major war in American history. This is how it was built — and how historians took it apart.

Robert Smalls: From the Planter Escape to the US Congress

Robert Smalls: The Freedom Destiny

At 3 a.m. on May 13, 1862, an enslaved Black pilot named Robert Smalls put on a Confederate captain's straw hat, stole a Confederate armed steamer out of Charleston Harbor, and delivered her to the US Navy. He freed himself, his family, and twelve others. Thirteen years later he was elected to the US Congress. In 2023, the Navy named a guided-missile cruiser after him.