Bruce Vail
Captain
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2015
Here is some red meat for my fellow D.H. Hill Fan Club members, and all the rest of CWT folk interested in Hill's little corner of Civil War history.
In his introduction to the Hill bio Lee's Maverick General , the great historian Gary Gallagher laments that the book spends little time on the General's post-war career. Graduate student Brit Kimberly Erslev did a good job addressing Gallagher's complaint in her 2007 thesis titled "Controversry and Crusade: Daniel Havey Hill and the Shaping of Reputation and Historical Memory," which I found by happenstance while noodling through the net last week.
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill makes the thesis available on line at: https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/rconcern/file_sets/fn107016z
At 60 pages (traditional typescript), it's a quick read, especially for those with a general familiarity with Hill. Erslev calls Hill an "architect" of the Lost Cause school because of Hill's early post-war publishing enterprises, and his later writings in publications like SHSP and "Century" magazine. I had never thought of Hill as an architect of the Lost Cause, but Erslev seems to have a pretty good case here. I wonder whether other historians agree.
Missing from the thesis are any colorful anecdotes illustrating Hill's acerbic and contrarian character. I think this is what most Club member really enjoy most and I, for one, would wish for a post-war treatment that includes some of this kind of material. (He apparently was fired as President of the Univesity of Arkansas because of his unpleasant personality, for example, but because this incident was unrelated to the Civil War its not discussed in Erslev's thesis. I'd like to know more about that.)
I'm interested in what other CWT folk think of Erslev's work, and of Hill's post-war career in general...
In his introduction to the Hill bio Lee's Maverick General , the great historian Gary Gallagher laments that the book spends little time on the General's post-war career. Graduate student Brit Kimberly Erslev did a good job addressing Gallagher's complaint in her 2007 thesis titled "Controversry and Crusade: Daniel Havey Hill and the Shaping of Reputation and Historical Memory," which I found by happenstance while noodling through the net last week.
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill makes the thesis available on line at: https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/rconcern/file_sets/fn107016z
At 60 pages (traditional typescript), it's a quick read, especially for those with a general familiarity with Hill. Erslev calls Hill an "architect" of the Lost Cause school because of Hill's early post-war publishing enterprises, and his later writings in publications like SHSP and "Century" magazine. I had never thought of Hill as an architect of the Lost Cause, but Erslev seems to have a pretty good case here. I wonder whether other historians agree.
Missing from the thesis are any colorful anecdotes illustrating Hill's acerbic and contrarian character. I think this is what most Club member really enjoy most and I, for one, would wish for a post-war treatment that includes some of this kind of material. (He apparently was fired as President of the Univesity of Arkansas because of his unpleasant personality, for example, but because this incident was unrelated to the Civil War its not discussed in Erslev's thesis. I'd like to know more about that.)
I'm interested in what other CWT folk think of Erslev's work, and of Hill's post-war career in general...
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