Ramsdell was not a prolific writer. One scholar commented about his output, "I have never known a man who knew so much and wrote so little." According to Wendell H. Stephenson, Ramsdell's bibliography included "three books (one of them in collaboration), two edited works, twenty-two articles, six unpublished papers, fifteen contributions to the
Dictionary of American Biography and two to the
Dictionary of American History, and some sixty book reviews. ... Articles appeared every year or two, and book reviews averaged two a year." Civil War historian
James M. McPherson cites Ramsdell – along with J. S. Tilley in his 1941 book
Lincoln Takes Command – as being the "two principal historians who advanced this interpretation" of events.
Books written •
Reconstruction in Texas (1910). New York:
Longmans, Green and Company. (PhD. dissertation) •
A School History of Texas (with
Eugene C. Barker and Charles S. Potts, 1912). Chicago: Row, Peterson and Company. •
Behind the Lines in the Southern Confederacy (1943). Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Books edited •
The History of Bell County by George W. Tyler (1936). Austin, Texas: Naylor Company. •
Laws and Joint Resolutions of the Last Session of the Confederate Congress (November 7, 1864—March 18, 1865) Together with the Secret Acts of Previous Congresses (1941). Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. '''''' ==Death==