J. K. Hosmer, _The Outcome of the Civil War_ (1900), in _American Nation_ Series; J. A. Woodburn, _The Life of Thaddeus Stevens_ (1913); E. P. Oberholtzer, _Jay Cooke, Financier of the Civil War_ (1907); J. C.
Schwab, _The Confederate States, A Financial and Industrial History_ (1901); E. D. Fite, _Social and Industrial Conditions in the North During the Civil War_ (1910), W. F. Fox, _Regimental Losses in the American Civil War_ (1889).
Of special sectional value is W. D. Foulke"s _The Life of Oliver P.
Morton_ (1899). Henry Wilson"s _The Rise and Fall of the Slave Power_ (1872-77); A. H. Stephens"s _A Const.i.tutional View of the Late War Between the States_ (1868-70) are typical of many others. Some of the best writers on the life and ideals of the old South are Mrs. Roger A.
Pryor, _Reminiscences of Peace and War_ (1906), and _My Day_ (1911); Mrs. James Chesnut, _A Diary from Dixie_ (1905); Mrs. Clement C. Clay, _A Belle of the Sixties_ (1904); and Mrs. Myrta L. Avery, _Dixie after the War_ (1906). Mrs. Jefferson Davis"s _A Memoir of Jefferson Davis_ (1890) is rather personal and profuse, but always more important than the more pretentious work of her husband, Jefferson Davis, in his _Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government_, already mentioned.
A rare source book for the South is J. B. Jones"s _A Rebel War Clerk"s Diary_ (1866), and an even more important one for the North is Gideon Welles"s _Diary_ (1911). Edward McPherson"s _Political History of the United States During the Great Rebellion_ (1865); William McDonald"s _Select Statutes and Other Doc.u.ments Ill.u.s.trative of the History of the United States, 1861-98_ (1903); J. D. Richardson"s _Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Confederacy_ (1905); and _Appleton"s Annual Cyclopedia and Register, 1862-1903_, give the most important official doc.u.ments and full accounts of public events as they occurred.