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The Homefront as America’s Unseen Campaign


Homefront Archives: Behind the Uniform explores the evolution of military spouse life as an integral part of American military history — revealing how families, partners, and home fronts shaped military effectiveness from the 18th through the 21st centuries. Just history—told from behind the uniform.
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When Instruction Meets Emotion: Army Woman’s Handbook and “The Army Wife”
Army Woman’s Handbook WWII did more than offer advice—it structured how Army wives were expected to function within wartime military systems. Paired with the poem “The Army Wife,” it reveals how emotional discipline, mobility, and constraint were normalized as part of institutional stability during World War II.
4 min read


Sentiments of an American Woman: Revolutionary Wives and the Birth of Political Organizing
Revolutionary wives political organizing was more than symbolic protest. Through spinning bees, tea refusal, and boycott enforcement, women strengthened economic resistance and reinforced the civilian networks that sustained wartime mobilization. This post reframes domestic labor as institutional participation in the infrastructure that supported the Continental Army.
7 min read


Part I: Revolution at Home — How Enlightenment Ideals Empowered Women
This foundational essay explores how Revolutionary War military wives shaped the home front and influenced military operations. Through acts that preserved munitions, protected supply lines, and altered territorial outcomes, these women operated within the material realities of war—revealing their role as institutional actors in the American Revolution.
5 min read


What Is Obvious Is Not Always Known: Rethinking Military History’s Home Front
Military history often marches forward with tales of strategy, valor, and battlefield heroism—but what about the voices from behind? “Military History’s Hidden Front” explores the unseen contributions of individuals who sustained and even fought alongside soldiers, only to be overlooked in the official record. Their stories challenge us to rethink what is remembered, and more importantly, what is forgotten.
4 min read


A Hero’s Wife: Rediscovering Adele “Kitty” Wainwright
Adele “Kitty” Wainwright military spouse history reveals more than personal endurance. As the wife of a captured WWII general, she lived within a carefully managed system of military information control and prestige culture. Her limited archival footprint reflects how officer families were structurally positioned within wartime institutions—visible enough to symbolize morale, yet constrained by expectations of discretion.
5 min read


"Campfollowing": The Unseen Backbone of Military Spouse History
This analysis of Campfollowing reframes military spouse institutional labor as structurally embedded within military systems. Rather than a fairness debate, it examines how differentiated labor categories—formal authority and informal influence—shaped command culture, retention, and operational endurance across American military history.
4 min read


My Library: My Bookshelves
My library isn’t just a reading list—it’s a bookish war room. This curated military history reading list explores memoirs, academic works, and overlooked voices to understand how American wars function as systems. Beyond battle plans and parade-ground narratives, these shelves dig into the logistics, households, and human networks that sustain the institution.
3 min read


Silent Ranks, Powerful Voices: Rethinking Military Wives and Spouses in Military History
Military spouses as institutional actors have shaped governance, diplomacy, morale systems, and community regulation across American military history. Rather than treating them as background figures, this essay examines how spouse labor functioned within military institutions—revealing how wars are sustained beyond the battlefield and why institutional placement matters.
4 min read
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