Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area presents “Casualties of War: A Civil War on the Western Border Symposium.” Measuring the struggle for freedom against the loss of liberty, the symposium will explore the wide-ranging effects of the border conflict and the loss of civil liberty for those caught in its vortex.
Until the mid-nineteenth century, a democratically elected government of civilian authorities protected the US’s founding guarantees: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Events in eastern Kansas and western Missouri forced the unthinkable, posing a direct challenge to those American values. When a military attempts to exert control over a hostile insurgent civilian population, fundamental questions emerge – with consequences that reverberate through history to the present moment.
This day-long event gathers a broad-based group of historians to discuss the price of civil liberties during wartime at the Harry S. Truman Library & Presidential Museum in Independence, Missouri.
Sessions presented will examine the Kansas-Missouri border war through the lenses of how geopolitical conflict shapes gender roles; the suspension of habeas corpus and invocation of martial law; the dawn of industrial total war; the lessons of insurgent movements; and more. Speakers include Kerry Altenbernd, Alisha Moore Cole, Dr. Harry Laver, Daniel L. Smith, and Richard Titterington.
Advance registration is required. Tickets for the program are $40 and include access to all sessions, museum admission, and a catered lunch. Ticket sales end August 15.
“Casualties of War: A Civil War on the Western Border Symposium” is a combined presentation of Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area and the Civil War Roundtable of Kansas City. Its sponsors encourage participants to gain a better understanding of the events of the late 1850s and early 1860s that shaped our region and influenced national history.