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| Dr. George C. Rable, the Charles G. Summersell Professor
of Southern History at UA (shown here with the Douglas Southall
Freeman History Award, has won a series of awards for his
book "Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!" (photo:
Alice Wilson) |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A University of Alabama history professor has
done what thoroughbred racehorse Funny Cide could not — win
a Triple Crown in competition.
Dr. George C. Rable, the Charles G. Summersell Professor of Southern
History at UA, was recently honored as the 2002 Jefferson Davis
Award winner for outstanding narrative on the period of the Confederacy
for his book, “Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!”
Rable became only the second rider…er…writer to ever
win both the Jefferson Davis Award, presented by the Museum of the
Confederacy, and the prestigious Lincoln Prize, awarded earlier
by Gettysburg College. The Jefferson Davis Award, the third leg
of Rable’s triple crown, was presented to him exactly one
week to the day before Funny Cide failed in his attempt to win the
Belmont Stakes and capture horse racing’s Triple Crown.
Previously this season, Rable won the Douglas Southall Freeman
Award from the Military Order of the Stars and Bars. All three of
Rable’s recent jaunts to the winner’s circle were for
his book, published by the University of North Carolina Press, detailing
the military, political, and social impact of the worst military
defeat that Abraham Lincoln’s Union armies suffered during
the Civil War.
“Neigh, I did not expect to win,” Rable said.
Rable nosed out Robert J. Bonner's “Colors and Blood: Flag
Passions of the Confederate South,” published by Princeton
University Press, and Gordon Rhea's “Cold Harbor: Grant and
Lee, May 26 - June 3, 1864,” published by Louisiana State
University Press, for the Jefferson Davis Award.
Judges, commenting on Rable’s book, called it one of the
“best battle books” ever published and “magisterial.”
The win marked the second time Rable’s book has crossed the
finish line as winner of the Jefferson Davis Award. In 1989, he
won for his book, “Civil Wars: Women and the Crisis of Southern
Nationalism.”
Published by the University of North Carolina Press, Rable’s
book details the military, political, and social impact of the worst
military defeat that Abraham Lincoln’s Union armies suffered
during the Civil War.
Rable joined the UA faculty in 1998. He earned his doctoral and
master’s degrees from Louisiana State University and his bachelor’s
degree from Bluffton College.
Rable’s previous books also include “The Confederate
Republic: A Revolution Against Politics,” and “But There
Was No Peace: The Role of Violence in the Politics of Reconstruction.”
He is currently researching the role of religion in the Civil War.
Rable’s web site lists his hobbies as “playing bad
tennis, watching bad baseball (Reds fan), reading British mystery
novels, and listening to Warren Zevon music.” He said he doesn’t
care much for oats.
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