Edward
L. Ayers, Conference Chair
Ed
Ayers has invited national authorities
on events leading up to the Civil War
to bring their perspectives to this innovative
program format. This program launches
the nation's observance of the Civil War
sesquicentennial. Dr. Ayers will serve
as moderator and a primary participant
for each panel discussion. About
Dr. Ayers
Jean
H. Baker
Dr. Jean Baker is Professor of History
at Goucher College, where she has taught
since 1972. She received her B.A. degree
from Goucher and her master’s and
Ph.D. degrees from Johns Hopkins University.
She is the author of ten books that include
Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography
and the recently published Sisters:
The Lives of America's Suffragists.
She is also the co-author, with David
Herbert Donald and Michael Holt, of Civil
War and Reconstruction. She is currently
writing a biography of Margaret Sanger,
the birth control advocate.
David
W. Blight
David W. Blight is Class of 1954 Professor
of American History at Yale University,
joining that faculty in January 2003.
He previously taught at Amherst College
for thirteen years. As of June 2004, he
is Director the Gilder Lehrman Center
for the Study of Slavery, Resistance,
and Abolition at Yale. During the 2006-07
academic year he was a fellow at the Dorothy
and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Writers
and Scholars, New York Public Library.
Blight
is a frequent book reviewer for The Washington
Post Book World, The Los Angeles Times,
and The Boston Globe and is one of the
authors of the bestselling American history
textbook for the college level, A People
and a Nation. His book, Race and
Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory
(Harvard University Press, 2001), received
eight awards, including the Bancroft Prize,
the Abraham Lincoln Prize, and the Frederick
Douglass Prize, as well as four awards
from the Organization of American Historians.
Blight’s most recent book, A
Slave No More: Two Men Who Escaped to
Freedom, Including Their Narratives of
Emancipation, was published by Harcourt
in 2007.
Christy
S. Coleman
Prior to being named president of the
American Civil War Center at Historic
Tredegar in 2008, Christy S. Coleman led
the nation’s largest African American
museum: the Charles H. Wright Museum of
African American History in Detroit. During
her tenure she launched a successful $43
million Legacy Campaign. She has served
as a consultant to the Smithsonian Institution,
Monticello, Mount Vernon and the National
Underground Railroad Freedom Center among
others. Ms. Coleman began her career at
the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation where
she fulfilled various, increasingly responsible
roles. Raised in Williamsburg, she received
her bachelor's and master’s degrees
from Hampton University.
Daniel
Crofts
Daniel Crofts has been a professor at
the College of New Jersey since 1975;
serving as the History Department chair
from 1996-2004. He earned his doctorate
at Yale in 1968 under the supervision
of C. Vann Woodward. His primary teaching
and research fields are the Old South
and the North-South sectional conflict.
As a political historian, he attempts
to frame politics in the larger social
and economic matrix.
Crofts
has published numerous articles, written
over fifty book reviews, and contributed
to four biographical anthologies (including
four entries in American National Biography).
Some of his published works include Old
Southampton: Politics and Society in a
Virginia County, 1834-1869 (University
Press of Virginia, 1992), and Reluctant
Confederates: Upper South Unionists in
the Secession Crisis (University of
North Carolina Press, 1989).
Charles
B. Dew
Charles B. Dew teaches the history of
the South and the Civil War and Reconstruction
at Williams College, where he is Ephraim
Williams Professor of American History.
A native of St. Petersburg, Florida, he
attended Woodberry Forest School in Virginia
and Williams College prior to completing
his Ph. D. degree at the Johns Hopkins
University under the direction of C. Vann
Woodward. He is the author of three books:
Ironmaker to the Confederacy: Joseph
R. Anderson and the Tredegar Iron Works;
Bond of Iron: Master and Slave at Buffalo
Forge; and Apostles of Disunion:
Southern Secession Commissioners and the
Causes of the Civil War. Two of these
works, Ironmaker to the Confederacy
and Apostles of Disunion, received
the Fletcher Pratt Award, given by the
Civil War Roundtable of New York for the
best nonfiction book on the Civil War
in its year of publication. Bond of
Iron was awarded the Organization
of American Historians' Elliott Rudwick
Prize and was a finalist for the Lincoln
Prize.
Gary
W Gallagher
Gary W. Gallagher is the John L. Nau III
Professor in the History of the American
Civil War at the University of Virginia.
He graduated from Adams State College
in Colorado and earned his M.A. and Ph.D.
in history from The University of Texas
at Austin. Prior to teaching at UVA, he
was Professor of History at Pennsylvania
State University.
His
many books include The Confederate
War and Causes Won, Lost, and Forgotten:
How Hollywood and Popular Art Shape What
We Know about the Civil War (University
of North Carolina Press, 2008) and The
Confederate War (Harvard University
Press, 1997). He has co-authored and edited
several works on individual battles and
campaigns and has published over 100 articles
in scholarly journals and popular historical
magazines.
Gallagher
has received many awards for his research
and writing, including the Laney Prize
for the best book on the Civil War, the
William Woods Hassler Award for contributions
to Civil War studies, the Lincoln Prize,
and the Fletcher Pratt Award for the best
nonfiction book on the Civil War. Gallagher
was founder and first president of the
Association for the Preservation of Civil
War Sites and has served on the Board
of Directors of the Civil War Trust.
Walter
Johnson
Walter Johnson's work focuses on slavery,
capitalism, and, increasingly, imperialism.
His book, Soul by Soul, uses the slave
market as a way into the fantasies, fears,
negotiations, and violence that characterized
American slavery. Since the book, his
work has followed two courses. First,
he wrote a series of essays about social
and historical theory: notions of time
in American slavery; the idea of "agency"
as the organizing theme of scholarship
on slavery; on theories of capitalism
and slavery; and the idea of reparations
for slavery as a historical narrative.
Second, he has been working on a history
of the Mississippi Valley between the
Louisiana Purchase and the Civil War entitled
River of Dark Dreams: Slavery, Capitalism,
and Imperialism in the Mississippi Valley.
Without giving up the focus on the immediate
experience of slavery and mastery upon
which he focused in Soul by Soul,
this book will embed the history of slavery
in the U.S. in the histories of global
capitalism (especially the cotton trade
and the Atlantic money market) and U.S.
imperialism (the Louisiana Purchase, the
Mexican War, and the illegal invasions
of Cuba and Nicaragua in the 1850s).
Walter
Johnson received his B.A. from Amherst
College and his doctorate from Princeton
University. Before coming to Harvard,
he taught History and American Studies
at New York University.
More
Information
Robert
C. Kenzer
Robert C. Kenzer is the William Binford
Vest Chair in History and American Studies
at the University of Richmond. He teaches
courses on the Civil War Era, the Civil
War in Film and Literature, as well as
Abraham Lincoln. A native of Chicago,
he grew up in Southern California and
received his BA in History from the University
of California at Santa Barbara. He then
earned his MA and PhD from Harvard University.
He is the author of both Kinship and
Neighborhood in a Southern Community:
Orange County, North Carolina, 1849-1881;
Enterprising Southerners: Black
Economic Success in North Carolina, 1865-1915
and co-editor of Enemies of My Country:
New Perspectives on Unionists in the Civil
War South.
Gregg
D. Kimball
Gregg D. Kimball is Director of Publications
and Educational Services at the Library
of Virginia and previously worked at the
Valentine Richmond History Museum for
almost ten years. He holds the Ph.D. in
history from the University of Virginia
as well as a Master of Library Science
from the University of Maryland. He has
published numerous essays and articles,
and authored the book American City,
Southern Place: A Cultural History of
Antebellum Richmond (University of
Georgia Press, 2000). Kimball's main research
interests are the American South, African-American
history and culture, and traditional music
in America.
Nelson
D. Lankford
For the past twenty-four years Nelson
D. Lankford has been the editor of the
Virginia Magazine of History and Biography,
the quarterly journal of the Virginia
Historical Society. His most recent book
is Cry Havoc: The Crooked Road to Civil
War, 1861! (Viking, 2007). It examines
the last weeks of peace between Lincoln’s
inauguration and the beginning of the
war. A previous book, Richmond Burning:
The Last Days of the Confederate Capital
(Viking, 2002) examined the end of the
war for Virginia’s capital city.
An earlier book, Eye of the Storm,
which Lankford co-edited with Charles
F. Bryan, Jr., concerned Private Robert
Knox Sneden, a Union private and prisoner
of war during the Civil War.
Lankford
is a native of Hampton, Virginia. He received
his undergraduate degree from the University
of Richmond and his Ph.D. and MBA from
Indiana University, Bloomington. He lives
in Richmond with his wife Judy, serves
as a director of the Hollywood Cemetery
Company and is a member of the Virginia
Communications Hall of Fame, and a former
president of the Conference of Historical
Journals.
Lauranett
L. Lee
Lauranett Lorraine Lee is a native of
Chesterfield County, Virginia. She received
her B.A. in communications from Mundelein
College, an M.A. in American History from
Virginia State University in 1993 and
a Ph.D. in American history from the University
of Virginia in 2002. She became the founding
curator of African American history at
the Virginia Historical Society in 2001.
She has taught at Old Dominion University,
Virginia Union University and Virginia
Commonwealth University. Her book, Making
the American Dream Work: A Cultural History
of African Americans in Hopewell, Virginia,
was published in August 2008.
David
S. Reynolds
David S. Reynolds is Distinguished Professor
of English and American Studies at the
Graduate Center of the City University
of New York. His current book is Waking
Giant: America in the Age of Jackson,
to be published by HarperCollins in October
2008. His book John Brown, Abolitionist:
The Man Who Killed Slavery, Sparked the
Civil War, and Seeded Civil Rights,
was, according to Publisher’s Lunch,
“the most widely reviewed in America
in major periodicals” when it appeared
in May 2005. He is also a regular contributor
to the New York Times Book Review.
David
Reynolds received a B.A. magna cum laude
from Amherst College and a Ph.D. from
the University of California, Berkeley.
He is one of a small handful of CUNY’s
6,100 professors chosen to represent CUNY
in its “Look Who’s Teaching
Here” ad campaign, featured in New
York’s subways, buses, and newspapers.
He has been widely interviewed on television
and radio for his expertise in American
politics and American history.
Manisha
Sinha
Manisha Sinha is Associate Professor of
Afro-American Studies and History at the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
She was born in India and received her
doctorate from Columbia University. She
is the author of The Counterrevolution
of Slavery: Politics and Ideology in Antebellum
South Carolina (2000) and is currently
working on a book on African Americans
and the movement to abolish slavery, 1775-1865.
Sinha
is the recipient of numerous fellowships,
among which are research grants from the
National Endowment in the Humanities,
American Philosophical Society, American
Council of Learned Societies, the Gilder
Lehrman Institute for American History,
the Charles Warren Center for Studies
in American History and the W.E.B. DuBois
Institute for African American Research
at Harvard University and a Rockefeller
Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Humanities
from the University of North Carolina.
Her research interests lie in nineteenth
century United States history, especially
the history of slavery and abolition,
southern and African American history,
and the history of the Civil War and Reconstruction.
She has published and lectured widely
on these topics.
Elizabeth
R. Varon
Elizabeth R. Varon is Professor of History
at Temple University and Associate Director
of the Center for the Humanities at Temple.
She received her MA from Swarthmore College
and PhD from Yale. A specialist in the
Civil War era and 19th-century South,
she is the author of We Mean to be
Counted: White Women and Politics in Antebellum
Virginia (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 1998), which
won the Lerner-Scott Prize of the American
Historical Association, and Southern
Lady, Yankee Spy: The True Story of Elizabeth
Van Lew, A Union Agent in the Heart of
the Confederacy (Oxford University
Press, 2003), which won the Lillian Smith
Prize of the Southern Regional Council.
Her newest book is Disunion!: The Coming
of the American Civil War, 1789-1859,
volume I of the "Littlefield History
of the Civil War Era" series (Littlefield
Fund for Southern History and University
of North Carolina Press, Fall 2008). She
has just begun working on a study of the
Underground Railroad in Philadelphia.
Clarence
E. Walker
Clarence E. Walker is a Professor of History
& Cultural Studies at the University
of California Davis. He has written several
books including, A Rock In A Weary
Land: The African Methodist Episcopal
Church During the Civil War and Reconstruction
(Louisiana State University Press, 1982);
Deromanticizing Black History: Critical
Essays and Reappraisals (University
of Tennessee Press, 1991); We Can't
Go Home Again: An Argument About Afrocentrism
(Oxford University Press, 2001), which
was a London Times Literary Supplement
"International Book of the Year",
2001; and Mongrel Nation: The America
Begotten By Thomas Jefferson and Sally
Hemings (Forthcoming University of
Virginia Press, 2009).
Joan
Waugh
Professor Joan Waugh of the UCLA History
Department researches and writes about
nineteenth-century America, specializing
in Civil War and Reconstruction. Professor
Waugh’s first book, Unsentimental
Reformer: The Life of Josephine Shaw Lowell
(Harvard University Press, 1998) is a
biography of an important social welfare
figure in 1880s New York City. Waugh has
published several essays on Civil War
topics and her next book, to be published
in 2009 is entitled “Ulysses
S. Grant: American Hero, American Myth.”
Her most recent book (with Alice Fahs)
is The Memory of the Civil War in American
Culture (University of North Carolina
Press, 2004).
Waugh
is often invited to give public lectures
about the Civil War. She has been interviewed
for many documentaries, including the
PBS series, “American Experience”
on Ulysses S. Grant first shown in 2002.
Waugh teaches the “Civil War and
Reconstruction,” and “America
from 1865-1900” undergraduate lecture
courses at UCLA. These courses regularly
attract from 200-400 students. Waugh has
been honored with three prizes for her
teaching, including UCLA’s “Distinguished
Teaching Award.” Waugh has also
developed a travel study course in which
she takes a group of UCLA students to
Gettysburg National Military Park and
other selected Civil War sites to study
the effects of the war.
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