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| Dr. George C. Rable |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Dr. George C. Rable, professor and Charles
G. Summersell Chair of Southern History at The University of Alabama,
has been named president of the Society of Civil War Historians.
The organization is a diverse and growing group of scholars and
students committed to the study of the American Civil War. Its
aim is to promote the teaching and study of the Civil War in academic
settings.
Rable earned his bachelor’s degree from Bluffton College,
Ohio, and his master’s and doctoral degrees from Louisiana
State University where he studied under the well-known historian
T. Harry Williams. He is the author of four well-received books
which are: “But There Was No Peace: The Role of Violence
in the Politics of Reconstruction,” “Civil Wars: Women
and the Crisis of Southern Nationalism,” which won the Jefferson
Davis Award in 1989 and the Julia Cherry Spruill Prize in 1991
and “The Confederate Republic: A Revolution Against Politics.”
His most recent book “Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!” won
the 2004 Distinguished Book Award in American History from the
Society for Military History. Published by the University of North
Carolina Press, this book details the military, political, and
social impact of the worst military defeat that Abraham Lincoln’s
Union armies suffered during the Civil War. “Fredericksburg!
Fredericksburg!” previously 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 joined the department of history in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences in 1998. He was selected as a Blackmon-Moody
Outstanding Professor in 2003 for bringing national attention
to UA through his writing achievements. Rable is currently working
on a project that will examine the role of religion in the Civil
War for the Littlefield History of the Civil War Era.
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