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Dr. Norman Dasinger, far left, makes a presentation
to Dr. George Rable, UA history professor, in
recognition of Rable's book on a key Civil War battle.
Seated next to Rable are, from left, his wife, Kay, and
Paul Bryant Jr., chairperson of the board of the Civil
War Preservation Trust.
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A University of Alabama history
professor’s acclaimed book about the Civil War battle of
Fredericksburg has won the Douglas Southall Freeman History
Award.
Representatives of the Military Order of the Stars & Bars
presented the award recently to Dr. George C. Rable, the Charles
G. Summersell Professor of Southern History at UA, for his book,
“Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!”
The award, established in 1983, is named after the Civil War
historian and Pulitzer Prize winning newspaper journalist from
Richmond, Va. It honors the best book published in Southern
military history over the past year. The Military Order of the
Stars & Bars is a national organization comprised of
Confederate officers’ descendants.
Dr. Norman Dasinger, former Alabama division commander of the
Military Order of the Stars & Bars and past commander in
chief of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, presented Rable with
the award. Paul Bryant Jr., University of Alabama System trustee
and chairman of the board of the Civil War Preservation Trust,
joined Dasinger in presenting the award. Publishers submitted
more than 100 titles for consideration for the award, Dasinger
said.
“Your book is simply outstanding!” wrote Ronald T.
Clemmons, chair of the Freeman Award committee, in a
congratulatory letter to Rable. “It presents a well-defined
picture of the battle, but much more. Your use of primary
sources to define what was happening to the soldiers on both
sides, the thoughts of the officers, and the fears of the
townspeople of Fredericksburg gives a complete picture of the
tragedy of war. Your work will be the benchmark for future
battle studies.”
Published by the University of North Carolina Press,
Rable’s book details the military, political, and social
impact of the worst military defeat that Abraham Lincoln’s
Union armies suffered during the Civil War.
Rable joined the UA faculty in 1998. He earned his doctoral
and master’s degrees from Louisiana State University and his
bachelor’s degree from Bluffton College.
Rable’s 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,
who also won the Lincoln Prize for “Fredericksburg!
Fredericksburg!” is currently researching the role of religion
in the Civil War.
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