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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A series of lectures about the Civil War will be held Saturday,
March 20, from 8:30 a.m.-12:15 p.m. in Alston Hall, 361 Stadium Drive, on The University
of Alabama campus.
This John Caldwell Calhoun Sanders Lecture Series is named after a young student from
Greene County who became one of the Confederacy's three famous “boy generals.”
The annual lecture series includes talks from biographical sketches and personal wartime
experiences on campus and in the field to unit histories and accounts of battles or
skirmishes involving some 900 UA alumni and its Corps of Cadets.
Dr. George Rable, the Charles G. Summersell Professor of Southern history at UA, will
speak on his book “Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!” (University of North
Carolina Press), for which he won the nation’s most generous annual American
history award, the Lincoln Prize.
Frances Robb, cultural and art historian and museum consultant, will present Civil
War photography in Alabama. Robb is currently working with UA’s Alabama Museum
of Natural History on the Eugene Allen Smith Photography Project that will represent
the late UA professor’s 54-year tenure as the state geologist of Alabama.
O. James Lighthizer, president of the Civil War Preservation Trust, will discuss the
efforts to save historic battlefields, and John Curry, a member of the 5th Alabama
Band, will lead a brief memorial service at the close of the event.
Admission is free, but advance registration is requested. For more information, phone
205/348-7551 or e-mail ccumming@aalan.ua.edu.
The Sanders Memorial Endowment Fund was established by Paul Bryant Jr. and is administered
jointly by UA’s Alabama Museum of Natural History
and UA’s William Stanley Hoole
Special Collections Library.
Sanders left the UA campus in 1861 and returned home to join the Confederate Guards,
which became part of the 11th Regiment Alabama Volunteer Infantry at Lynchburg, Va.,
and remained as part of the Army of Northern Virginia throughout the war. On Aug. 21,
1864, Sanders, in command of Wilcox’s Old Brigade, died, at age 24, fighting
to save the Weldon Railroad near Petersburg, Va.
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