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Home > CLA > CLA Departments & Centers > CCWR > Burnham Lecture

Burnham Lecture in Civil War History

 

Each April, the Center for Civil War Research invites a distinguished historian to the University of Mississippi to deliver a lecture on the Civil War era. The Burnham Lecture in Civil War History is free and open to the public.

Dr. Van Robinson Burnham was a family physician, Mississippi native, and University of Mississippi alumnus whose lifelong love of history and archeology prompted his generous support for the Center for Civil War Research. Through the Burnham Lectures, the Center honors Burnham's commitment to sharing historical knowledge and ensuring that others have the resources to explore and learn from history.

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  • Bloodhounds: Dogs, Prisoners, and War in the Department of the South, 1835-1877 by Lorien Foote

    Bloodhounds: Dogs, Prisoners, and War in the Department of the South, 1835-1877

    Lorien Foote

    Lorien Foote will deliver the Center for Civil War Research's 2025 Burnham Lecture on dogs, war, and the Department of the South on April 9 at 5pm in the Overby Center Auditorium.

    Lorien Foote is the Patricia & Bookman Peters Professor in History at Texas A&M University. She is the author four books. Her most recent, Rites of Retaliation: Civilization, Soldiers, and Campaigns in the American Civil War, was awarded the 2022 Organization of American Historians Civil War and Reconstruction Book Award. The Yankee Plague: Escaped Union Prisoners of War (2016), was a Choice Outstanding Academic Title, and The Gentlemen and the Roughs: Manhood, Honor, and Violence in the Union Army (2010), was a finalist and honorable mention for the 2011 Lincoln Prize. She is the co-editor of three volumes, including The Oxford Handbook of the American Civil War (2021). Dr. Foote is the creator and principal investigator of the Digital Humanities Project “Fugitive Federals,” which visualizes the escape and movement of 3000 Federal prisoners of war during the American Civil War.

  • White Union Soldiers' Attitudes Toward and Interactions with African Americans During the Civil War by Joseph T. Glatthaar

    White Union Soldiers' Attitudes Toward and Interactions with African Americans During the Civil War

    Joseph T. Glatthaar

    Joseph T. Glatthaar, Stephenson Distinguished Professor; Adjunct Professor of the Curriculum in Peace, War and Defense, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Dr. Glatthaar specializes and teaches courses in the American Civil War and American military history on the undergraduate and graduate levels.

  • Refugee Camps on U.S. Soil: Exiting Slavery and Remaking Citizenship in Civil War Contraband Camps by Chandra Manning

    Refugee Camps on U.S. Soil: Exiting Slavery and Remaking Citizenship in Civil War Contraband Camps

    Chandra Manning

    Dr. Manning is a historian of slavery and the Civil War who focuses on the experience of ordinary Americans, both black and white, during the war. Her first book, What This Cruel War Was Over(2007), won the Avery O. Craven Prize which is awarded by the Organization of American Historians for the most original non-military history on the Civil War Era. Her most recent book, Troubled Refuge: Struggling for Freedom in the Civil War (2016), which examines the experience of former slaves who fled to Union lines during the war and in the process shaped the course of the war and of emancipation, won the Jefferson Davis Prize awarded by the American Civil War Museum for best book on the Civil War.

  • What It Meant to Them: How the Civil War Generation Remembered by Caroline Janney

    What It Meant to Them: How the Civil War Generation Remembered

    Caroline Janney

    Dr. Janney is a Civil War historian who focuses on memory. Her most recent book, Remembering the Civil War: Reunion and the Limits of Reconciliation (2013), looks at the different ways Union and Confederate veterans remembered the war in order to commemorate their own cause. Ultimately these soldiers sought to justify their own reasons for fighting in the Civil War while dismissing the other side's reasons as unjust. Though it seemed Americans across the nation eventually accepted the Lost Cause, this was because the United Daughters of the Confederacy were effective at publicizing education.

  • Reconstructing: A Life Amidst the Ruins by Stephanie McCurry

    Reconstructing: A Life Amidst the Ruins

    Stephanie McCurry

    Stephanie McCurry, R. Gordon Hoxie Professor of History, Columbia University Dr. McCurry is a Civil War historian who focuses on gender history and Southern women. Her most recent book, Confederate Reckoning: Power and Politics in the Civil War South (2010), explores the Confederate government's inability to provide for the large numbers of women and slaves left to fend for themselves on the home front, and concludes that these domestic crises ultimately decided the fate of the Confederacy. Dr. McCurry is currently working on two book-length projects: the first examines the Civil War as an event in women's history while the second investigates the chaotic period immediately following the fall of the Confederacy.

  • Black Women and Children Refugees: The Making of a Civil War Humanitarian Crisis by Thavolia Glymph

    Black Women and Children Refugees: The Making of a Civil War Humanitarian Crisis

    Thavolia Glymph

    Thavolia Glymph, Associate Professor of History, Duke University Dr. Glymph is an historian of the Civil War and slavery who examines the roles of women, gender ideology, class, and race during and after the Civil War. Her most recent book is Out of the House of Bondage: The Transformation of the Plantation Household (2008). Dr. Glymph is currently working on a study of Civil War veterans who served in the Egyptian Army in the 1870s, and an examination of the lives of enslaved and free women and children in Civil War labor and refugee camps.

  • Death of the President: The Murder of Abraham Lincoln by John R. Neff

    Death of the President: The Murder of Abraham Lincoln

    John R. Neff

    John R. Neff , Director of the Center for Civil War Research, University of Mississippi Dr. Neff is a Civil War historian who not only examines the military aspects of the war but also analyzes the momentous social and political ramifcations wrought by the conflict. His most recent book, Honoring the Civil War Dead: Commemoration and the Problem of Reconciliation (2004), examined how memorializing the war dead kept alive lingering sectional animosities and subsequently impeded the process of reconciliation. Dr. Neff is currently working on an examination of Civil War memory in postwar Chicago.

  • Sorrow and Survival: Providing for the Families of Gettysburg's Soldier Dead by Carol Reardon

    Sorrow and Survival: Providing for the Families of Gettysburg's Soldier Dead

    Carol Reardon

    Carol Reardon, George Winfree Professor of American History, Pennsylvania State University Dr. Reardon is a military historian of the Civil War who incorporates political and social history into her research of military doctrine and training. She has published a number of works on Civil War military history, including the award winning Pickett's Charge in History and Memory (1997), With a Sword in One Hand and Jomini in the Other (2012), and the recent A Field Guide to Gettysburg: Experiencing the Battlefield Through Its History, Places, and People (2013), which she co-authored with William Thomas Vossler.

  • God as General: Was There a Religious History of the American Civil War? by George Rable

    God as General: Was There a Religious History of the American Civil War?

    George Rable

    George Rable, Charles G. Summersell Chair in Southern History, University of Alabama Dr. Rable has published five books on a diverse array of Civil War Era topics, his most recent being God's Almost Chosen Peoples: A Religious History of the American Civil War (2010). His research has won numerous prizes, including the Jefferson Davis Award, the Julia Cherry Spruill Prize, and the Lincoln Prize. His current research will explore the relationship between Abraham Lincoln and Goerge B. McClellan as well as how Confederates defined their "Yankee" enemies.

  • Terrorism and Counterterrorism in the American Civil War by Daniel Sutherland

    Terrorism and Counterterrorism in the American Civil War

    Daniel Sutherland

    Daniel Sutherland, Distinguished Professor of History, University of Arkansas Daniel Sutherland is the author of eight books and over forty chapters and articles on a range of topics in the Civil War Era. His most recent book, A Savage Conflict: The Decisive Role of Guerillas in the American Civil War (2009), won the 2010 Tom Watson Brown Book Prize for scholarship on the Civil War era.

  • Disunion! by Elizabeth Varon

    Disunion!

    Elizabeth Varon

    Elizabeth Varon's research focuses on the American South, the Civil War Era, and Women's and Gender history. Her publications include We Mean to be Counted: White Women and Politics in Antebellum Virginia (1998) and Disunion!: The Coming of the American Civil War, 1789-1859 (2008). She joined the faculty of the University of Virginia in 2011.

  • Hollywood's Civil War: How Films Shape Memory by Gary W. Gallagher

    Hollywood's Civil War: How Films Shape Memory

    Gary W. Gallagher

    Gary W. Gallagher, John L. Nau III Professor in the History of the American Civil War, University of Virginia Gary Gallagher has written and edited numerous books on the Civil War, including The Confederate War (1997) and most recently, The Union War (2011). His research includes work on Civil War memory, the Lost Cause, and Robert E. Lee.

 
 
 

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