$ 48.00
NEW! IN STOCK!
Of the 880,000 Southerners mobilized to fight for the Confederacy, 94,000 were killed in action outright or mortally wounded. Virginia suffered the most with 31,000 with Alabama next with 27,000 – only 1,000 Floridians died on the battlefield. A wholly accurate count will almost certainly never be made and Southern losses were probably much higher. And these number do not account for death from disease. Research has shown that soldiers from rural areas were more susceptible to disease and died at a higher rate than city dwellers. The Confederate Army had a higher percentage of farm boys.
$ 120.00
PREORDER ONLY! DUE TO ARRIVE IN FEBRUARY Union General U.S. Grant Mounted Ulysses S. Grant has been widely acclaimed by both his contemporaries and historians as an exceptional horseman....
$ 120.00
IN STOCK! NEW! General George Washington Mounted, 1775-80 Congress created the Continental Army on 14 June 1775. Washington was chosen to become its commander-in-chief because of his military experience and the belief...
$ 48.00
IN STOCK! NEW! British 43rd Regiment of Foot, Standing Firing, 1780 According to The Manual Exercise, As Ordered by His Majesty, in 1764 by Hugh Gaine, 1775, the British manual of arms...
$ 48.00
IN STOCK! NEW! British 43rd Regiment of Foot Defending, 1870 This soldier takes up a defensive position. His bayonet is affixed and at the ready, and although rarely used in...