Obituary.James A. Rawley, a widely respected historian of the Civil War era and American race relations and a biographer of Abraham Lincoln, died on November 29, 2005, in Lincoln, Nebraska, at the age of eighty-nine. A native of Terra Haute, Indiana, Rawley earned his B.A. and M.A. at the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries. . After serving in World War II, he studied at Columbia University under Allan Nevins, David Herbert Donald David Herbert Donald (b. 1920, Goodman, Mississippi) is a historian of the American Civil War. Donald took his PhD in 1945 under James G. Randall at the University of Illinois. He taught at Columbia University, Johns Hopkins and, from 1973, Harvard University. , and Merle merle a pattern of coat color pigmentation with dark, irregular blotches on a lighter background. Seen in some Collies and Welsh corgis. In shorthaired dogs, e.g. Great Danes and Dachshunds, the similar pattern is called dapple. E. Curti, receiving his Ph.D. in 1949. Rawley taught at Hunter College and Sweet Briar College Sweet Briar College is located on the former plantation of Elijah Fletcher and his family. Fletcher was a teacher, businessman, and mayor of Lynchburg. His wife, Maria Crawford, is credited with naming the land Sweet Briar. , where he published his first book, Edwin D. Morgan
Edwin Denison Morgan (February 8, 1811 – February 14, 1883) was Governor of New York from 1859 to 1862 and served in the United States Senate from 1863 to 1869. , 1811-1883: Merchant in Politics (New York, 1955), and served as chair of the history department for four years and chair of the Division of Social Studies for three more. After moving to the University of Nebraska in 1964, Rawley was chair of the history department for a decade while writing four more important books on the Civil War era, with an emphasis on race, slavery, and emancipation. His Turning Points of the Civil War (Lincoln, 1966) won an immediate and lasting audience on campuses across the country. Introducing generations of undergraduates to the political and military events of the Civil War, the book is still in print after forty years. In 1969, Rawley published what is possibly his best-known book, Race and Politics: "Bleeding Kansas" and the Coming of the Civil War (Philadelphia, 1969), which is recognized as that generation's definitive account of popular sovereignty in the Kansas Territory during the 1850s. Meanwhile, he edited another popular book, Lincoln and Civil War Politics (New York, 1969), that joined Turning Points as a perennial classroom favorite. After yet another book on the Civil War era--The Politics of Union: Northern Politics During the Civil War (Hinsdale, Fla., 1974)--Rawley adopted an innovative quantitative approach to historical research in The Transatlantic Slave Trade: A History (New York, 1981). In a painstaking analysis of fragmentary sources, he contributed to the systematic attempt to identify the origins, destinations, and eventual fates of the more than ten million Africans who suffered enslavement en·slave tr.v. en·slaved, en·slav·ing, en·slaves To make into or as if into a slave. en·slave ment n. throughout the Americas. Sharing the common
themes of race, slavery, and emancipation, these six books have
commanded regular use and durable respect from a generation of scholars
and history students. Rawley also published a long list of influential
articles, including his most frequently read and cited "The
Nationalism of Abraham Lincoln" in Civil War History, 9 (September
1963), 283-98.
During his twenty-three years on the University of Nebraska faculty, Rawley won most of the highest honors that the university can bestow, including the Outstanding Research and Creative Activity Award, the Carl A. Happold Distinguished Professorship, and the Pound Howard Distinguished Career Award. Upon retiring in 1987, he continued to research and write, mentor junior colleagues, and contribute to the historical profession at large. In 1990 he published Secession: The Disruption of the American Republic, 1844-1861 (Malabar, Fla.), which traces the origins of the Civil War for undergraduates, and then accepted the challenge of writing a complete, one-volume biography of Abraham Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln and a Nation Worth Fighting For (Lincoln, 1996). In his last book, London: Metropolis of the Slave Trade (Columbia, Mo., 2003), Rawley returned to the subject of the transatlantic Slave trade. The University of Nebraska Press will publish two additional books, A Lincoln Dialogue and New Turning Points of the Civil War, which were in manuscript at the time of his death. Throughout his sixty-year career, Rawley contributed energetically and generously to the historical profession as a longtime and active member of the American Historical Association The American Historical Association (AHA) is the oldest and largest society of historians and teachers of history in the United States. Founded in 1884, the association promotes historical studies, the teaching of history, and preservation of, and access to, historical , the Organization of American Historians The Organization of American Historians (OAH), formerly known as the Mississippi Valley Historical Association, is an organization of historians focusing on American history. (OAH OAH Organization of American Historians OAH Overall Height OAH Order After Hearing OAH Orcs and Humans (Warcraft I) OAH Obvious As Hell OAH Office of Administration Hearings ), the Southern Historical Association, the African Studies Association, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History The Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) is a non-profit organization founded in Chicago, Illinois, on September 9, 1915 and incorporated in Washington, D.C. , and the Abraham Lincoln Association. Among other professional distinctions, he was a Fellow in the Royal Historical Society and a Fellow in the Society of American Historians. In Nebraska, Rawley contributed to the Nebraska State Historical Society The Nebraska State Historical Society is a Nebraska state agency, originally founded in 1878 to "encourage historical research and inquiry, spread historical information ... and to embrace alike aboriginal and modern history. (NSHS NSHS Nebraska State Historical Society NSHS North Stafford High School NSHS Naval School of Health Sciences NSHS Newton South High School NSHS National Seed Health System NSHS North Salinas High School (California) ) as its president, a member of its Executive Board for twenty years, and a trustee of the NSHS Foundation for nearly three decades. He was perhaps most widely recognized for establishing the OAH's James A. Rawley Prize, which honors and encourages outstanding scholarship in the history of American race relations, passing on the torch, so to speak, to the next generation of historians of race, slavery, and civil rights. Renowned for his generous support for scholars throughout our profession, Rawley was personally self-effacing but intellectually forceful, an ideal colleague and a warm friend to all who knew him. University of Nebraska president James B. Milliken James B. Milliken was an American jurist who served as a judge of the Kentucky Court of Appeals (now Kentucky Supreme Court) for 24 years from 1951 to 1975. He served three terms as chief justice, 1956-57, 1963-64 and, 1971-73. Milliken was a graduate of Centre College. , who studied under Rawley, characterized him "as an extraordinary scholar and teacher and an important presence on the campus for many years," concluding that "I am among the many who will miss him greatly." He is survived by his wife of sixty years, Ann, two sons, and three grandchildren. [KENNETH J. WINKLE, University of Nebraska-Lincoln] |
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