Capture Arkansas


Book Description

A look at Arkansas as seen through the eyes of its residents. The result of an online photography contest sponsored by the newspaper in 2008.




Capture Arkansas


Book Description

A look at Arkansas as seen through the eyes of its residents. The result of an online photography contest sponsored by the newspaper in 2010.




Capture Arkansas


Book Description

Capture Arkansas IV is a unique approach to fine-art book publishing. An online community of local photographers submitted photos to be considered for this book in specific categories (or challenges) on capturearkansas.com. Then, area residents voted to determine which photos would be published. The chapters in this book are pulled from the challenges phosted to capturearkansas.com. From 232,217 photo submissions to the pages of this book, 3,923,276 votes from local folks helped shape what you hold in your hands. It's Arkansas through the eyes and lenses of local photographers and enthusiasts. Enjoy.




Capture Arkansas


Book Description

Capture Arkansas III is a unique approach to fine-art book publishing. An online community of local photographers submitted photos to be considered for this book. Area residents voted to determine which photos would be published. It's Arkansas through the eyes and lenses of local photographers and enthusiasts.




General J. O. Shelby at Clarendon, Arkansas: The Capture and Destruction of the U.S.S. Queen City


Book Description

It can be said that the American Civil War has drawn more interest and historical scholarship than any other event in our nation's past. The War as it was fought west of the Mississippi River has perhaps been the least covered of all the aspects of the conflict. General J. O. Shelby at Clarendon, Arkansas: The Capture and Destruction of the USS Queen City addresses the cauldron of lawlessness generated by deserters from both sides behind enemy lines, while highlighting the destruction of the USS Queen City by Gen. Joseph O. Shelby. This 1864 event on the lower White River, 50 miles from the Mississippi River, marks the only sinking of a Federal warship in Arkansas waters. Considered one of the best Confederate cavalrymen to operate in the Trans-Mississippi, Shelby led his "Iron Brigade" on one of the longest cavalry raids of the Civil War.







The American Text-Book for the Million


Book Description

Reprint of the original, first published in 1873.




Major General John Alexander McClernand


Book Description

A sympathetic assessment of Major General John Alexander McClernand, a highly controversial individual who served his country as soldier and statesman. It sheds light on the Union command systems and the politics of war, as well as the personalities and relationships among senior officers.




Confederate Veteran


Book Description




The Second Admiral


Book Description

A DEFINITIVE BUT HIGHLY EXCITING LIFE OF ONE OF THE MOST COLORFUL AND HITHERTO NEGLECTED FIGURES IN AMERICAN HISTORY David Dixon Porter (1813-1891) was a U.S. Navy admiral and a member of one of the most distinguished families in the history of the U.S. Navy. Promoted as the second U.S. Navy officer ever to attain the rank of admiral, Porter helped improve the Navy as the Superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy after significant service in the American Civil War. Porter began naval service as a midshipman at the age of 10 under his father, Commodore David Porter, on the frigate U.S.S. John Adams. He served in the Mexican War in the attack on the fort at the City of Vera Cruz, commanded an independent flotilla of mortar boats at the capture of New Orleans, and later advanced to the rank of (acting) rear admiral in command of the Mississippi River Squadron, which co-operated with the army under Maj.-Gen. Ulysses S. Grant in the Vicksburg Campaign. After the fall of Vicksburg, he led the naval forces in the difficult Red River Campaign in Louisiana. Late in 1864, Porter was transferred from the interior to the Atlantic coast, where he led the U.S. Navy in the joint assaults on Fort Fisher, the final significant naval action of the war. Porter worked to raise the standards of the U.S. Navy in the position of Superintendent of the Naval Academy when it was restored to Annapolis. He initiated reforms in the curriculum to increase professionalism. In the early days of President Grant's administration, Porter was de facto Secretary of the Navy. When his adoptive brother David G. Farragut was advanced from rank of vice-admiral to admiral, Porter took his previous position; likewise, when Farragut died, Porter became the second man to hold the newly created rank of admiral. He gathered a corps of like-minded officers devoted to naval reform.