|
|
|
|
|
| |

$24.95 + S/H
|
When in the Course of Human Events:
Arguing the Case for Southern Secession (1999)
By Charles Adams (Rowman & Littlefield)
Eighty-five years after secession from England, adhering to principles articulated by their revolutionary forebears, the eleven Confederate States of America seceded from the United States. Prominent scholar Charles Adams explodes the myths that the South abandoned the Union to maintain slavery while President Lincoln's goal was to preserve the Union. This is the story of how Lincoln destroyed the decentralised federal system of the Founders and created a vast centralised empire to control territory, resources and tax revenues. 267 pages ~ Hardcover only, #B101HC, $24.95.
Cost: $24.95 + S/H
|
|

$7.00 + S/H
|
A Southern View of the Invasion of the Southern States and War of 1861-1865 (1935)
By Captain Samuel A'Court Ashe (Ruffin Flag)
It was the hope of Captain Ashe that his pamphlet eventually would be in the home of every true Southerner to preserve the facts and the honor of those who fought defending the liberties provided by the, now defunct, great republic. In July 1936, the United Confederate Veterans, by action at New Orleans, conferred on Captain Ashe the title of Brigadier General because of their appreciation of his great service in writing a work that spoke for so many. 75 pages ~ Paperback only, #B106PB, $7.00.
|
|

$12.00 + S/H
|
Is Davis a Traitor? Secession as a Constitutional Right Prior to the War of 1861 (1907)
By Albert Taylor Bledsoe (Crown Rights)
The subjugation of the Southern states, and their acceptance of the terms dictated by the United States, shifted the Federal Government as a servant of the states to the position of their master. American government founded on the basis of the "consent of the people" (government by consent) changed to government by conquest and marks the transition of the "republic" to the world's most powerful "empire." This work vindicates the loyalty of the South to the Constitution and defines the radical revolution imposed on them by the United States. Modern historians interpret history by the street bully's slogan, "Might makes right." This author shows us that right is right even when it is overcome by force and he helps the non-Southern understand that while the South surrender its arms, it did not surrender its belief in Constitutional liberty. The body of the South was defeated but not its soul. 271 pages ~ Paperback only, #B115PB, $12.00.
|
|

$14.00 + S/H
|
Liberty and Slavery (1856)
By Albert Taylor Bledsoe (Crown Rights)
Bledsoe shows that slavery was not at odds with the Constitution and the understanding of true liberty. He argues that the agenda of the Abolitionist movement in mid-1860's was to utterly destroy constitutional government and to substitute a lawless egalitarianism which would make a slave of all to the centralised state. 384 pages ~ Paperback only, #B116PB, $14.00.
|
|

$59.95 + S/H
|
The Papers of John C. Calhoun Vol. XXV 1847-1848
Edited by Clyde N. Wilson
(University of South Carolina: 1999)
This volume cover Calhoun's three primary concern in 1848:the infatuation of some of his countrymen with war and imperial conquest;
the evils of the noisy and aggressive but principleless party system; and
the apparent determination of the Northern majority to deny the South the
benefits of the Union and reduce it to a beleaguered and exploited minority.
For him these issues were but results of one fundamental problem-a people
who had forgotten the virtues of their fathers that were necessary for the
preservation of republicans institutions. This contains some of the most
insightful passages of Calhoun. xix plus 715 pages ~ Hardcover only,
#B262HC, $59.95.
|
|
|
|

$59.95 + S/H
|
The Papers of John C. Calhoun
Vol. XXVI 1848-1849
Edited by Clyde N. Wilson
(University of South Carolina: 2001)
Tensions over efforts to bar slave property from the
Territories of the Union reached arresting levels in this last period of
Calhoun's life for he would only live two more years. One of the most
arresting events, then and later, was Calhoun's forthright confrontation of
the doctrine that "all men are created equal." He declared that this idea
as then understood was both untrue and mischievous. This volume gives hjs
insightful explanation. xvi plus 578 pages ~ Hardcover only, #B263HC,
$59.95.
|
|
|
|

$17.00 + S/H
|
The Logic of History (1864)
By Stephen D. Carpenter (Crown Rights)
The events of 1860 onward cannot be accurately understood without the context of the radically revolutionary doctrines cherished by the Republican Party. The war was not started with the South to emancipate slaves. The shocking five hundred political Republican documents, speeches, and newspaper clippings published in this volume, prove that the party of Lincoln intended to destroy the Constitution and dissolve the "Union" from its formation in 1854, and only abandoned this agenda in favor of "preserving the Union" when its members perceived the wealth and power to be gained from the destruction and subjugation of a militarily smaller South. 351 pages ~ Over-sized paperback only, #B122PB, $17.00.
|
|

$12.00 + S/H
|
The Southern States of the American Union
By J.L.M. Curry (1895) (Crown Rights)
Curry draws from a wealth of historical documents to set the record straight. He saw that history, as it was then being written, would "consign the South to infamy." He traces the origin of Mr. Lincoln's war to the pre-Constitution struggle between the advocates of a radically centralised government and the proponents of State sovereignty. He demolishes the theory concocted by Daniel Webster, who was "on-the-take" from forty northern industries, that the Union created the states in an aggregate character rather than by individual sovereign and independent states, a position Lincoln took late in his life. Curry includes an excellent defense of the constitutional right of secession and shows that this right was repeatedly asserted by the New England states long before it was acted upon by the South. Curry had a distinguished career in the Alabama State Assembly and later in the Congress of the United States. 248 pages ~ Paperback only, #B129PB, $12.00.
|
|

$16.00 + S/H
|
A Defense of Virginia and the South (1867)
By Robert Lewis Dabney (Sprinkle Publications)
Dabney argues from Scripture that slavery, as it was practiced in the South, was not inherently evil, as claimed by northern Abolitionist, and that the "peculiar institution" in the United States originated from New England shippers in the seventeenth century. The Southern States protested the system under the British and three Southern states outlawed the middle passage slave trade upon their independence from England with plans to end its practice altogether. The system was an imposition of New England. He shows slavery as having nothing to do with the invasion by the United States. 356 pages ~ Hardcover only, #B130HC, $16.00.
|
|

$20.00 + S/H
|
The Practical Philosophy ()
By Robert Lewis Dabney (Sprinkle Publications)
This book contains his prophetic discussions of totalitarianism versus Christian Liberty. 560 pages ~ Cloth(hardcover) only, #B132HC, $20.00
|
|

$12.00 + S/H
|
Facts and Falsehoods Concerning the
War on the South (1904)
By George Edmonds (Crown Right)
The rare book provides quotations exclusively from northern sources showing that, the American people have not been told the true nature and agenda of Lincoln's radical Republican Party. 280 pages ~ Paperback only, #B143PB, $12.00.
|
| |
|

$4.00 + S/H
|
The Truth About the War Conspiracy of 1861
By W. H. Johnstone ( 1921) (Crown Rights)
This little known essay presents the Official Records, published by the United States Department of War in the 1980's, telling how the South was deliberately and treacherously maneuvered by Abraham Lincoln into firing, what would be believed, as the first shot upon a helpless United States garrison. This was Lincoln's second attempt to start the war. The first attempt, at Fort Pickens in Florida, failed. The story of Lincoln's first attempt is told, in detail, by John S. Tilley in his book, Lincoln Takes Command. 40 pages ~ Booklet, #B155PB, $4.00.
|
|

$23.00 + S/H
|
The South was Right! (1997)
By James R. Kennedy & Walter D. Kennedy (Pelican Press)
The Kennedy's tell the truth about Mr. Lincoln's War. There was no shining United States force fighting a moral battle to end slavery and no oppressive Confederate force fighting to preserve slavery. The United States, taken over by corrupt radical New England republicans, ruthlessly sent military against six northern states and invaded the Confederate States in a vulgar revolutionary grab for power and the wealth of the sovereign Southern Republic. Once you begin reading this is a difficult book to put down before you have read the last page, then you want everyone you know to read it. This book sets the record straight. 431 pages ~ Hardcover only, #B161HC, $23.00.
|
|

$26.95
+ S/H |
States' Rights and the Union: Imperium in
Imperio 1776-1876 (2000)
By Forrest McDonald (University Press of Kansas)
The title literally means
"sovereignty within sovereignty," or the division of power
within a single jurisdiction. He shows that the states in
the constitution delegated the central government expansive
powers but affirmed the doctrine of states' rights. He follows
the episodic turbulence of federal-state relations from the
Hamilton-Jefferson rivalry to the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions,
New England's resistance to the Constitution and Jefferson's
foreign policy and the War of 1812, the nullification controversy,
Andrew Jackson's war against the Bank of the United States,
and, finally, the vitriolic public debates that led to secession
and the War for Southern Independence. Forrest McDonald is
Distinguished Research Professor of History at the University
of Alabama, the author of sixteen books, including a Pulitzer
Prize finalist, and was named by the National Endowment for
the Humanities as the sixteenth Jefferson Lecturer, the nation's
high honor in the humanities. 304 pages ~ Hardcover, #B176HC,
$29.95. Our price $26.95
|
|

$16.95
+ S/H |
States' Rights and the Union: Imperium in
Imperio 1776-1876 (2000)
By Forrest McDonald (University Press of Kansas)
The title literally means
"sovereignty within sovereignty," or the division of power
within a single jurisdiction. He shows that the states in
the constitution delegated the central government expansive
powers but affirmed the doctrine of states' rights. He follows
the episodic turbulence of federal-state relations from the
Hamilton-Jefferson rivalry to the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions,
New England's resistance to the Constitution and Jefferson's
foreign policy and the War of 1812, the nullification controversy,
Andrew Jackson's war against the Bank of the United States,
and, finally, the vitriolic public debates that led to secession
and the War for Southern Independence. Forrest McDonald is
Distinguished Research Professor of History at the University
of Alabama, the author of sixteen books, including a Pulitzer
Prize finalist, and was named by the National Endowment for
the Humanities as the sixteenth Jefferson Lecturer, the nation's
high honor in the humanities. 304 pages ~ Paperback, #B176PB,
$16.95
|
|

$10.00 + S/H
|
Daniel Webster and the South (1913)
By Thomas Manson Norwood
U.S. Senator from Georgia
(Virginia Heritage Press)
Daniel Webster was no great orator but he was the best of New England. Webster's famous speech of 1830 was the result, not of conscience and conviction, but the response of a bought-and-paid-for Senator. Webster was receiving a "pension" from forty northern industrialists. A critical study of his life affords more material for an understanding of that part of our history than does the biography of any other man. Essays include: Webster's Oratory, Webster as a Statesman and Patriot, Mr. Webster's Moral Attitudes Considered, Remarks on Webster's Reply to Hayne, Webster's Reply to Calhoun Considered, Webster's Quibbling on Words, The Facts Against Webster, Webster's "Parental" Fallacy, Webster's Misinterpretation of the "Preamble", and An Amazing Ignorance and a Suggested Speech. 100 Pages ~ Over-sized loose-leaf bound only, #B184LL, $10.00
|
|

$80.00 + S/H
|
A Constitutional View of the War
Between the States: Two Volumes ()
By Alexander H. Stephens (Sprinkle Publications)
1,493 pages ~ Cloth(hardcover) only, #B202HC, $80.00.
|
|

$12.95 + S/H
|
The Coming of the Glory (1949/1995)
By John S. Tilley (Nippert Publishing)
Here is a rich resource for "Facts" on Slavery, Secession, and Reconstruction. Nothing is more dangerous than half-truths. This book presents whole truths letting the record speak for itself. The retouching of history, revisionism as done by all past fallen empires, has largely obscured details without which the canvas presents only distorted images. Southerners are wearied of being pilloried by the uninformed and the misinformed. The constant flow of distorted images of the past and present has a long-term effect that has now matured. John S. Tilley was a Harvard educated attorney who did not want to see the facts lost during the usual empire blame-game. 303 pages ~ Paperback only, #B211PB, $12.95.
|
|

$11.00 + S/H
|
Abolition, The Union, and the Civil War (1863)
By Clement L. Vallandigham (Crown Rights)
In the darkest and most trying hours of the republics greatest conflict, Vallandigham, a Congressman from Ohio, never deviated from the old and true principles whereby the republic was formed and preserved, and by which alone it can be saved from destruction, restored and perpetuated. He saw President Lincoln's election as a "fatal mistake" in that it had put into office a man whose most "Cherished principles were hostile to the Constitution and the republic and one who would endanger its peace and perpetuity. His speech, "Executive Usurpation," delivered in the House of Representatives in response to Lincoln's 4 July 1861 address to Congress resulted in his eventual arrest and exile. Lincoln finally sent his army into the six northern states who took up arms against him when their governors refused to send state troops to invade the Confederates States of America. 250 pages ~ Paperback only, #B215PB, $11.00.
|
|

$19.95 + S/H
|
The Glittering Illusion: English Sympathy for
The Southern Confederacy (1989)
By Sheldon Vanauken (Regnery Gateway)
Foreward by Lord Beloff
"There is strong evidence that during the War Between the States English sentiment tended to favor the Confederate side. Great Britain did not intervene because her leaders expected a Southern victory. So Mr. Vanauken persuades us in his fascinating analysis of the central event in American history, as seen from a British perspective. A fascinating book," wrote M.E. Bradford. Vanauken explicates this history and considers how English intervention and a Southern victory would have dramatically altered history. 188 pages ~ Hardcover only, #B216HC, $19.95.
|
|
|
|

$5.00 + S/H
|
The Gray Book (1935)
By Various Authors (Crown Rights)
The Sons of Confederate Veterans published this responding to the false history being propagated in public school textbooks in the 1930's. These essays are more relevant today as history is reaching new heights of revisionism. 50 pages ~ Booklet, #B219PB, $5.00.
|
|

$3.50 + S/H
|
No. 4: From Union to Empire by Clyde N. Wilson
Wilson is professor of history at the University of South Carolina and editor of the Papers of John C. Calhoun. 33 pages ~ Booklet, #B223PB, $3.50.
|
|

$3.50 + S/H
|
No. 5: The Abolitionists of the Old South by John Remington Graham
. Graham is a native of Minnesota, and a direct descendant of a signer of the Mayflower. He was Advisor in British constitutional law and history to the Amicus Curiae for Quebec before the Supreme Court of Canada, 1997-1998. 30 pages ~ Booklet, #B224PB, $3.50.
|
|
|
|

$33.95 + S/H
|
Hunter's Fiery Raid
Through Virginia Valleys
By Gary C. Walker
(A & W Enterprise: 1989)
Hunter is "the northern general Southerner's love to hate." Hunter made Southern civilians and their property his target of choice for
his U.S. government-approved Nazi-like "reign of terror." He sacked and
burned Washington College (now Washington and Lee University) and Virginia
Military Institute. He sacked and burned civilian homes and often
"executed" the civilians for simply being the owner of the property.
President Davis branded Hunter a "criminal." This is no dry recitation of
just cold facts. 460 pages ~ Hardcover only, #B251HC, $33.95.
|
|
|
|

$15.95 + S/H
|
John Brown: The Making of a Martyr ()
By Robert Penn Warren (Cumberland House Publishing)
Warren's first book portrays the violent, severely flawed would be idealist sponsored by northern industry to commit atrocities against Southern families whose violent seizure of Harper's ferry arsenal let to his death. He was seen as a martyr to those who sponsored genocide of Southern white's and Negroes. 494 pages ~ Paperback only, #B230PB, $15.95.
|
|
|
|
|
©2000 NOP Design
|