They Knew Lincoln
/A conversation at Ford's Theatre on April 16--D.C. Emancipation Day--between historian Kate Masur and journalist Michele Norris about this fascinating book and its original author, John E. Washington
Read MoreBlogging about abolitionist Julia Wilbur, the Civil War, Alexandria, women's rights, and more
A conversation at Ford's Theatre on April 16--D.C. Emancipation Day--between historian Kate Masur and journalist Michele Norris about this fascinating book and its original author, John E. Washington
Read MoreJulia Wilbur records what she felt and saw the day after Lincoln's assassination.
Read MoreThis wonderful photograph of Harriet Tubman, re-discovered last year, is now conserved and in the public domain!
Read MoreA visit to Congressional Cemetery at dusk in late March.
Read MoreThis could be you. At a little, round table with an agent to make an in-person pitch. Washington Writers Conference, May 4-5.
Read MoreThere's been a lot in the paper lately about Freedom House in Alexandria. Here's some background.
Read MoreAn evening with Nikki O'Dell, who portrayed Harriet Jacobs in the PBS documentary Slavery and the Making of America.
Read MoreA great trip to Pennsylvania, New York, and Connecticut, with lots of connections and conversations.
Read MoreWe all have our particular interests.
Read MoreNo, the GG bridge wasn't built in the Civil War, but the Presidio was up and running.
Read MoreDecember 31, 1859, was a sad milestone for Julia Wilbur, but one that propelled her in a very different direction.
Read MoreHot Christmas gift in 1853-1854: Autographs for Freedom, compiled by the Rochester Ladies Anti-Slavery Society.
Read MoreDaryl and Diane Sannes' generosity calls attention to Minnesotans who fought at Gettysburg and suffered a horrific casualty rate. And it turns out that their own home has a connection to two members of the regiment, one of whom died in the battle.
Read MoreWant to give someone a signed copy of A Civil Life in an Uncivil Time from afar? Here's the solution
Read MoreIn 1861, Julia Wilbur celebrated Thanksiving quietly in New York State. The following year was a different story.
Read MoreContemplating the role of Dr. Samuel Mudd in the Lincoln assassination, while surrounded by his and his family's possessions.
Read MoreLance Mallamo helped a rapt audience "find" some pieces of lost Alexandria.
Read More"Murder, aristocracy, recluses, and goats"--and race relations in this book by Karen L. Cox.
Read MoreI hope my guest blog for the University of Nebraska Press gives you some useful tips to go from diary pages to a narrative.
Read MoreWatch my conversation with Bjorn Skaptason on Author's Voice at Chicago's Abraham Lincoln Book Shop.
Read MorePaula Tarnapol Whitacre's website with a focus on her forthcoming biography on abolitionist Julia Wilbur.