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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A University of Alabama history
professor’s acclaimed book about the worst military defeat
that Abraham Lincoln’s Union armies suffered during the Civil
War has won the 13th annual Lincoln Prize.
Dr. George C. Rable, the Charles G. Summersell Professor of
Southern History at UA, won first prize and $20,000 for
“Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!” (University of North
Carolina Press), a majestic account of the military, political,
and social impact of that epochal battle. Announcement of the
Lincoln Prize winners for the best works of 2002 was made today
by Gettysburg College, which administers the awards.
“Great military writing has entered a bold new
era-requiring an understanding of the roles not only of soldiers
and their officers, but of politics, diplomacy, religion, and
more; civilians black and white, male and female, people who
were severely tested by gigantic encounters,” said Dr. Gabor
Boritt, director of the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg
College. “George Rable has created a bold book,” Boritt
said, “and has elevated a neglected battle into the realm of
importance.”
The Lincoln Prize was founded and is endowed by business
leaders Richard Gilder and Lewis Lehrman, with the support of
others. Boritt worked with Gilder and Lehrman in establishing
the prize.
Rable’s book was chosen from among 144 books considered for
the prize. This year marks the first time that the prestigious
Lincoln Prize for the best book on Lincoln and the Civil War era
has gone to a volume about a battle. The December 1862 Union
disaster at Fredericksburg, Va. was called “a black day in the
calendar of the Republic” by the New York Times and prompted
Lincoln himself to lament: “We are now on the brink of
destruction. It appears to me the Almighty himself is against
us, and I can hardly see a ray of hope.” The two armies
suffered nearly 18,000 casualties in the one-day fight.
Despite the defeat, and the enormous political pressure that
followed, Lincoln went on to issue the Emancipation Proclamation
three weeks after the battle. Rable’s account of
Fredericksburg and its history-altering aftermath considers
“the mundane, the horrific, and the transcendent” in freshly
demonstrating its significance, according to a statement issued
by the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College.
“No battle more severely tested the will of Lincoln and the
Union than Fredericksburg, and no book about this engagement
more ably and originally deals with the soldiers’ courage and
suffering, and their President’s resolve and commitment to
freedom and Union, than George Rable’s superb study of the
battle,” according to the Gettysburg College statement,
announcing the prize. “It is a privilege for us to recognize
this book, and to remind modern Americans of the sacrifices that
were made in the 19th century to preserve the nation which we
revere in the 21st.”
Gilder and Lehrman and the Institute that carries their name
has amassed one of the nation’s great private collections of
American historical manuscripts. The institute devotes itself to
education by supporting magnet schools, teacher education,
curriculum development, exhibitions, and publications.
John Stauffer won second place for “The Black Hearts of
Men: Radical Abolitionists and the Transformation of Race”
(Harvard University Press) and Michael W. Fitzgerald earned
honorable mention for “Urban Emancipation: Popular Politics in
Reconstruction Mobile, 1890-1890” (Louisiana State University
Press).
In addition, a special “E-Lincoln Prize” was bestowed on
Harpweek.com’s web site, “Lincoln and the Civil War.com,”
founded by John Adler.
A three-member jury recommended the 2003 winners of the book
awards: Lincoln Prize alumnus William C. Harris of North
Carolina State University in Raleigh,
chairman; Lesley Gordon of the University of Akron; and Thavolia
Glymph of Duke University. Final selections were made by the
Board of Trustees of the Prize.
The Lincoln Prizes are announced, by tradition, on
Lincoln’s birthday. They will be formally presented to the
winners on April 15, at a banquet at Gettysburg College. First
place is accompanied by a bronze replica of Augustus Saint-Gauden’s
life-size bust, “Lincoln the Man.”
Rable joined the UA faculty in 1998. He earned his doctoral
and master’s degrees from Louisiana State University and his
bachelor’s from Bluffton College. His previous books include
“The Confederate Republic: A Revolution against Politics,”
“Civil Wars: Women and the Crisis of Southern Nationalism”
and “But There Was No Peace: The Role of Violence in the
Politics of Reconstruction.” Rable is currently researching
the role of religion in the Civil War.
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