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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


How Language Shapes military spouse institutional actors and History—And the Stories We Tell
Military spouse institutional actors have long shaped and sustained American military power. This article explores how terms like “camp follower” and “dependent” classified spouses within military systems, influencing institutional status, belonging, and historical memory. Viewing war through language and lived experience reframes how we understand the structure and endurance of U.S. military history.
6 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


Silent Ranks, Powerful Voices: Rethinking Military Wives/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.
5 min read


Mercy Otis Warren: The Military Wife Who Shaped the American Revolution
Mercy Otis Warren is often remembered as a Revolutionary writer, but her role as a military wife placed her inside the networks sustaining the war effort. This essay examines how her intellectual work reinforced Patriot legitimacy, elite coordination, and wartime governance during the American Revolution.
6 min read


Unearthing Untold Narratives: My Journey into Military History
I explore untold stories in military history—especially the overlooked roles of military spouses. As a veteran, spouse, historian, and museum curator, my journey led me to uncover how women shaped strategy, logistics, and legacy. Through research, writing, and relentless curiosity, I’m reframing what—and who—counts in military history. It’s time to move military spouses from the footnotes to the front lines of our historical record.
5 min read
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