
This page indexes our articles on how immigrant participation in the Civil War was remembered after the war and how it is remembered today:
1. Painting of the Return of the 69th from Bull Run Unearthed
2. Why I’m Writing The Immigrants’ Civil War
3. Cinco de Mayo Holiday Dates Back to the American Civil War
4. New Immigrants Try to Come to Terms with America’s Civil War
5.Important Citizenship Site to be Preserved-Fortress Monroe
6. Civil War Anniversaries-History, Marketing, and Human Rights
7. Memorial Day’s Origins at the End of the Civil War
8. Germans Re-enact the Civil War-But Why Are They Dressed in Gray?
9. The Upstate New York Town that Joined the Confederacy
10. Fort Schuyler-Picnic where the Irish Brigade trained
11. Student Asks: Why Don’t We Learn More About Immigrants in the Civil War?
12. The Five Meanings of “The Immigrants’ Civil War”
13. The Upstate New York Town that Joined the Confederacy
14. The Real Story Behind The Immigrants’ Civil War Photo
15. Civil War Blogs I Read Every Week
16. First Annual The Immigrants’ Civil War Award Goes to Joe Reinhart
17. Damian Shiels Wins Second Annual The Immigrants’ Civil War Award
18. Mother Jones: Civil War Era Immigrant and Labor Leader
Fort Schuyler-Picnic where the Irish Brigade trained
The Fallout from No Irish Need Apply Article Spreads Worldwide
No Irish Need Apply Professor Gets into a Fight With Our Blogger Pat Young Over Louisa May Alcott
Books for Learning More About The Immigrants’ Civil War