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UA history professor George C. Rable is pictured with the
bust of Abraham Lincoln he received as winner of the 2003
Lincoln Prize.
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Dr. George C. Rable, a history professor
at The University of Alabama whose latest published work has won
three national book awards, is the winner of the University’s
Blackmon-Moody Outstanding Professor Award. He will be honored in
a ceremony at the UA President’s Mansion at 4 p.m. on Sunday,
Oct. 19.
The award is one of the highest honors bestowed on UA faculty and
is presented annually to a faculty member whose, “singular,
exceptional, or timely work, whether in the form of research, a
product, a program or published material, has brought national recognition
to the faculty member and The University of Alabama.”
“Your eminent colleagues at other universities believe you
are one of the finest historians of the Civil War era and that your
work will be cited a century from now,” wrote UA President
Robert E. Witt in notifying Rable of the award. “You are a
most deserving winner of the Blackmon-Moody Outstanding Professor
Award.”
The honor was created by Frederick Moody Blackmon of Montgomery
to honor the memory of his grandmother, Sarah McCorkle Moody of
Tuscaloosa.
Rable’s latest book, “Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!”
won the 2003 Lincoln Prize, the Jefferson Davis Prize of the Museum
of the Confederacy, the Douglas Southall Freeman Book Award and
was a History Book Club Selection. Rable, who joined UA’s
College of Arts and Sciences
in 1998, is the Charles G. Summersell Professor of Southern History.
“George tells how the Union’s spectacular military
failure at Fredericksburg affected politics, economics, society
and culture,” wrote Dr. Lawrence Kohl, UA associate professor
in history, in his nomination of Rable for the UA award. “George’s
work will permanently change the way historians write about the
Civil War.”
Rable’s nomination drew letters of support from across the
country. Dr. Drew Gilpin Faust, the founding dean of the Radcliffe
Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard, wrote that the book, published
by the University of North Carolina Press, is “an unsurpassed
view into the intersections of military, social, political and cultural
history.”
In referring to Rable’s career, Faust wrote, his “ability
to deal with so many different sorts of subjects is quite remarkable,
and his level of productivity daunting to the rest of us who cannot
match his pace of output.”
Dr. James M. McPherson, the George Henry Davis Professor of American
History at Princeton, wrote, “George is without question one
of the finest historians in my field in this generation…”
Dr. Lawrence Clayton, professor and chair of UA’s history
department, cited Rable’s “amazing display of commitment”
in working with students. “I don’t know of anyone here
in my career at Alabama,” Clayton wrote, “who better
personifies the model teacher and scholar, with an immense heart
for service to the profession, University, and community to boot.”
Rable earned his doctoral and master’s degrees from Louisiana
State University and his bachelor’s degree from Bluffton College.
His previous books include “Civil Wars: Women and the Crisis
of Southern Nationalism,” “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.
Dr. Ronald Rogers, assistant vice president for academic affairs
and dean of UA’s graduate school, chaired the selection committee
recommending Rable for the Blackmon-Moody Award.
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