Americans
for Southern Heritage


Americans for Southern
Heritage believes that America's heritage, and that of the South which is
an integral component, is worth preserving in honor of our heroes, past and
present, and that of our children and descendants.
We believe
there are powerful forces arrayed and well-funded which are dedicated to
destroying America's heritage, and as a
consequence ASA's members are committed to shining
the light of day upon their subversive activities.
In this
regard, ASA will randomly publish certain studies and manuscripts exposing
these organizations and their members. For, we believe, once a sufficiently
number of loyal Americans are adequately informed, and
prompted to responsible political action, our enemies can be repulsed and America's sovereignty and its
proud heritage preserved.
Resources
- King
of America
- SPLC's
Morris Dees & His Morbid PastPart I
Part II
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Newspaper
E-Mail Address Lists
· A thru L
· M thru R
· S thru Z
Central Bank E-Mail Addresses
Private & Commercial Bank E-Mail Addresses
Recommended Reading
- Union and Liberty: The Political
Philosophy of John C. Calhoun, Ross M. Lence, Editor, Indianapolis: Liberty Press, 1992, 626
pages, hardcover.
- Lincoln Takes Command, by John
Shipley Tilley, Nashville: Bill Coats, Ltd., 1991, 334 pages, hardcover.
- The Coming of the Glory, by John
Shipley Tilley, Nashville: Bill Coats, Ltd., 1995, 290 pages, paperback.
- Facts the Historians Leave Out: A Confederate Primer, by John
Shipley Tilley, Nashville: Bill Coats, Ltd., 1951, 80 pages, paperback.
- The Southern Tradition at Bay: A
History of Postbellum Thought, by Richard
M. Weaver, Washington, DC: Regnery
Gateway, 1989, 400 pages, hardcover.
- The Southern Essays of Richard M. Weaver, George M.
Curtis, III and James J. Thompson, Jr., Editors, Indianapolis: Liberty Press, 1987,
268 pages, hardcover.
- War For What?, by Francis
W. Springer. Nashville: Bill Coats, Ltd., 1990, 221 pages, paperback.
- The South Was Right!, by James Ronald Kennedy and
Walter Donald Kennedy, Gretna, LA: Pelican Publishing Company, 1994, 431
pages, hardcover.
- Time on the Cross: The
Economics of American Negro Slavery, by Robert William Fogel and Stanley L. Engerman, New York: W.W.
Norton, 1989, 306 pages, paperback.
- The Tragic Era, The Revolution
After Lincoln, by Claude
G. Bowers, Houghton Mifflin, 1929, 567 pages, hardcover.
- The Real Lincoln, by Thomas DiLorenzo, Prima
Communications, 2002, 336 pages, hardcover.
- The Prostrate State: South Carolina under Negro
Government, by James S. Pike, 1874, D. Appleton & Co.,
New York, (back cover review)
- Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men, by Jeffrey Rogers Hummel,OPen Court Pub.,1996,420 pages,softcover.
- Tariffs, Blockades, and Inflation, The Economics of the Civil War, by Robert Thornton and Robert Ekelund Jr.,SR Books, 2004,124 pages,softcover.
- The Political Culture of the American Whigs, by Daniel Walker Howe, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1979, 404 pages, softcover.
- View of the Constitution of the United States, by St. George Tucker and Clyde Wilson, Liberty Fund, 1999, 478 pages, hardcover.
- The Fate of Liberty, Abraham Lincoln and Civil Liberties, by Mark E. Neely, Jr.,Oxford University Press, 1991, 278 pages, paperback.
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Selected Passages
from The Tragic Era
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