| Gettysburg,
PA, February 12, 2008—Two books offering fresh and
provocative insights into the lives of three of the Civil
War era’s most compelling figures—Abraham
Lincoln, Frederick Douglass, and Robert E. Lee—will
share the 2008 Lincoln Prize, the most generous and prestigious
award in the field of American history, it was announced
today. The winners of this year’s prize are Professor
James Oakes of the City University of New York for The
Radical and the Republican: Frederick Douglass, Abraham
Lincoln, and the Triumph of Antislavery Politics
(W. W. Norton) and diplomat/historian Elizabeth Brown
Pryor for Reading the Man: A Portrait of Robert E.
Lee Through His Private Letters (Viking).
Each author will receive a $20,000 cash award along
with a bronze cast of Augustus St. Gaudens’ larger-than-life
portrait sculpture of Abraham Lincoln. Honorable mention
and a $10,000 prize will go to Chandra Manning of Georgetown
University for the book What this Cruel War Was
Over: Soldiers, Slavery, and the Civil War (Alfred
A. Knopf).
Announcement of the Lincoln Prize winners for the
year’s best books on Abraham Lincoln and the Civil
War was made by the Lincoln & Soldiers Institute
at Gettysburg College, which administers the yearly
awards. The $50,000 annual prize was co-founded and
endowed by business leaders and philanthropists Richard
Gilder and Lewis Lehrman, the principals of the Gilder
Lehrman Institute of American History in New York. The
Institute devotes itself to education by supporting
magnet schools, teacher education, curriculum development,
exhibitions, and publications, as well as endowing several
major history awards. Mr. Gilder and Mr. Lehrman established
the Lincoln Prize in 1990, together with Professor Gabor
Boritt, Director of the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg
College. Since founding the Lincoln Prize in 1990, Mr.
Gilder and Mr. Lehrman have bestowed nearly $1 million
on the annual winners, including special prizes.
Commented Mr. Gilder and Mr. Lehrman on the naming
of this year’s prize-winning books: “It
is a rare moment in American history when three such
iconic figures are illuminated in studies of such power
and originality. With the works for which we honor them,
James Oakes and Elizabeth Brown Pryor have made major
contributions to our understanding of leaders who—by
their writing, political leadership, and military genius,
and by either their capacity for, or resistance to,
change—altered the way America regards both itself
and its people. We are proud to recognize and celebrate
these superb literary and historical achievements.”
Commenting further on the award winners, Professor Gabor
Boritt said: “So much has been written about Lincoln,
Lee, and Douglass that it is difficult to imagine the
appearance of new contributions of unmistakable significance—much
less the arrival of two such signal achievements in
a single year. Moreover, these works possess not only
originality of thought and depth of research, but elegance
of writing. The fine books by Oakes and Pyror have made
a significant impact on the field—as has Chandra
Manning’s stunning examination of Civil War soldiers’
attitudes toward slavery and emancipation—and
they all richly deserve the honors they have earned.”
James Oakes is Graduate School Humanities Professor
in the history department at the Graduate Center of
the City University of New York. His previous books
include The Ruling Race: A History of American Slaveholders
and Slavery and Freedom: An Interpretation of the
Old South. He earned his Ph.D. at the University
of California, Berkeley, and has written many scholarly
articles, encyclopedia entries, and book chapters. The
Lincoln Prize jury commended Professor Oakes for using
“with great effectiveness a “new comparative
framework to analyze the careers of the wartime President
and the nation’s most important black leader.”
The jury particularly cited the author’s “powerful”
narrative, “designed for historians as well as
general readers,” which “flows seamlessly…sometimes
with dramatic effect.”
Elizabeth Brown Pryor, whose acclaimed previous book
was Clara Barton, Professional Angel, has enjoyed
distinguished careers as both a historian and as a senior
diplomat in the American Foreign Service, most recently
working as a senior advisor to the Commission on Security
and Cooperation in Europe of the United States Congress.
Commending the Pryor book for “tackling a familiar
subject in an unconventional way,” the jury praised
its “stunning” writing and “brilliant”
analysis, adding: “The book captures Lee’s
central importance and the far-reaching impact of his
decisions in a way that no other scholar has accomplished.”
Chandra Manning, who has taught at Harvard and Pacific
Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington, is currently
assistant professor of history at Georgetown University.
What this Cruel War Was Over is her first book.
Calling it “an excellent book on an important
subject” and “a signal contribution to Civil
War literature, the jury called Manning’s “a
book of remarkably broad scope—broader than the
title suggests—that shows that slavery was not
only central to understanding the causes and consequences
of the Civil War but is equally vital to understanding
why and how the soldiers fought.”
The three-member 2008 Lincoln Prize jury— George
C. Rable, the Charles Summersell Chair in Southern History,
University of Alabama (jury chair and 2003 winner of
the Lincoln Prize); Loren Schweninger, the Elizabeth
Rosenthal Excellence Professor and director of the Race
and Slavery Petitions Project at the University of North
Carolina at Greensboro and co-winner of the 2000 Lincoln
Prize; and Elizabeth Leonard, the John J. and Cornelia
V. Gibson Professor of History, and Director of Women’s,
Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Colby College in Maine—considered
120 submissions for the 2008 award before recommending
the finalists to the Lincoln Prize board, which makes
the final decision.
The Lincoln Prize will be formally awarded at a dinner
at the Yale Club in New York on Tuesday, April 1.
For more information on the Lincoln Prize, visit:
http://www.gettysburg.edu/civilwar/prizes_andscholarships/lincoln_prize/
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