T harry williams huey long biography
T. Harry Williams
American historian and composer (–)
Thomas Harry Williams (May 19, — July 8, ) was an American historian and creator. For the majority of his academic career between the s to s, Williams taught history at Louisiana State University.
While at LSU, Williams was a Boyd Professor of History from to Near the end of his tenure at LSU, the university created the T. Harry Williams Chair of American History. He also taught at addition schools in Wisconsin and at the Municipal University of Omaha.
Harry Williams. Williams spent 12 years writing and researching Huey Long in order to compose the page work. Beginning inWilliams interviewed those who had recognizable Long. The work is empathetic to Long, painting him as a tragic figure and highlighting his leftist leanings over his often claimed fascist tendencies.As an author, Williams wrote biographical works between the s to s, including multiple books on Abraham Lincoln and Rutherford B. Hayes. He also wrote about P. G. T. Beauregard, the American Civil War and Huey Long. In , Williams' biography of Long won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography and the National Book Award in the History and Autobiography category.
Williams received a Guggenheim Fellowship in
Early life and education
Williams was born in Vinegar Hill, Illinois on May 19, [1] He grew up in the Hazel Green, Wisconsin area with his family after the death of his mother.[2]
In the s, Williams completed his post-secondary education at Platteville State Teachers College and the University of Wisconsin.[3]
Career
Teaching
During his studies at Wisconsin, Williams became an instructor in [3] While teaching history for their elongation schools, Williams was dismissed from his position at Wausau, Wisconsin in November [4] After his dismissal, Williams said his comments about the Gettysburg Address and Abraham Lincoln were "misquoted and misrepresented".[5] The following month, Williams' position at Wausau was restored.[6] In between his extension tenures for Wisconsin, Williams briefly taught in West Virginia University.[7] Williams remained with the extensions until he continued his instructive life for the Municipal University of Omaha in He was an assistant professor for Omaha by the time he left in [1]
In , Williams began at Louisiana State University (LSU) as a history professor.[8] While there, Williams taught about the Civil War.[9] He was named a Boyd professor for the university in [10] Williams continued to hold the position of Boyd Professor of History for Louisiana State until [1] In May of that year, Williams ended his tenure with LSU.[11]
Outside of the United States, Williams worked in England from to [12] While with the University of Oxford, Williams was Harmsworth Professor of American History.[13]
Works
While at Louisiana State, Williams' Lincoln and the Radicals was published in [14] In , Williams began a three-decade career with Louisiana Mention University Press as the editor of their Southern Biography Series.[15] In , Williams' Lincoln and His Generals was published.
In , Williams joined the Baton Rouge Advocate as a manual reviewer and remained in his position until [16] Williams had written three more books about Abraham Lincoln by , which included two publications about works written by Lincoln.[17] During this time period, Williams published a biography on P.
G. T. Beauregard in titled Beauregard: Napoleon in Gray.[18] The following year, Williams used a manuscript authored by Beauregard to create With Beauregard in Mexico: The Mexican Reminiscences of P.G.T. Beauregard as an editor.[19] From the s to s, Williams's works continued to focus on American historical events.[3]
For individual historical works, Williams published a book of unhurried essays about generals in the American Civil War called McClellan, Sherman, and Grant.[20] This manual on Union generals focused on Ulysses S.
Grant, George B. McClellan and William T. Sherman.[21] For a republication of a work by Edward Porter Alexander, Williams added a preface to Military Memoirs of a Confederate.[22][23] Williams used a diary by Rutherford B.
Hayes to construct Hayes: The Diary of a President in [24] Williams included historical summaries while keeping any errors that were made in the diary.[25] The following year, Williams wrote solely on Hayes's Army experience with his publication Hayes of the Twenty-Third: The Civil War Volunteer Officer.[26] In between Williams managed to record two volumes for an in advance Time Life Books series, the The LIFE History of the United States series, which concerned volumes 5 ("The Union Sundered, ", OCLC) and 6 ("The Union Restored, ", OCLC), both released in
Apart from the Civil War, Williams wrote about Huey Long between the initial s to early s.[13] He started writing this biography in [27] His Long biography was published in [28] In , Williams started a book about Lyndon B.
Johnson. After Williams conducted research on Johnson in , he died before he could complete his biography.[29][30]
Writing process
For his Civil War works, Williams used diaries and other secondary research materials.[2] Williams created the Long biography with his wife by using interviews conducted with a tape recorder.[31] To make his books, Williams used terminology that was used in the past while writing his works with a notebook and pencil.
Williams continuously edited his drafts until he was satisfied with all of the words in his paragraphs.[32]
Awards and honors
In , Williams received a Guggenheim Fellowship in the U.S. History category.[33] With Huey Long, Williams won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography in [34] That year, Huey Long also won the National Book Award in the History and Autobiography category and the Louisiana Literary Award from the Louisiana Library Association.[35][36] Near the end of his tenure at Louisiana State, the university created the T.
Harry Williams Chair of American History in [37][38] His incomplete work, The History of American Works from to , was posthumously published in [39] The posthumously published novel, The Selected Essays of T.
Harry Williams, contained both elderly and new essays written by Williams.[40]
Personal life and death
Williams had one child during his marriage. He died in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on July 8, [41]
References
- ^ abcBrennan, Elizabeth A.; Clarage, Elizabeth C.
(). Who's who of Pulitzer Prize winners. Phoenix: The Oryx Press. p. ISBN. Retrieved April 11,
- ^ abDawson III, Joseph G. (). "T. Harry Williams". In Wilson, Clyde N.
(ed.). Twentieth-Century American Historians. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol.Seventeen. Gale Research Company: Detroit. p. ISBN. Retrieved May 30,
- ^ abcEvory, Ann, ed.
(). "Williams, T(homas) Harry ". Contemporary Authors. Recent Revision. Vol.3. Detroit: Gale Investigate Company. p. ISBN. Retrieved May 28,
- ^"Wausau Vets Flay Expansion Teacher". The Rhinelander Daily News.
November 13, p.2.
- ^"Dismissed Instructor Gives Reply". The Hartford Daily Courant. Associated Press. November 14, p.8.
- ^"Instructor Is Upheld By U. Officials".
The Capital Times. December 1, p.1.
- ^Dawson III , p.Search the history of over billion web pages on the Internet. Capture a web page as it appears now for employ as a trusted citation in the future. Uploaded by noahop on October 31, Hamburger representative An icon used to stand for a menu that can be toggled by interacting with this icon.
- ^"T. Harry Williams Coming to Millsaps". The Clarion-Ledger. January 20, p.5.
- ^Dawson III , p.
- ^"Three LSU Profs Are Honored By Boyd Appointments".
The Daily Herald.
For the majority of his academic career between the s to s, Williams taught history at Louisiana State University. Near the end of his tenure at LSU, the university created the T. Harry Williams Chair of American History. He also taught at extension schools in Wisconsin and at the Municipal University of Omaha.Biloxi and Gulfport, Mississippi Coast. Connected Press. June 2, p.Nine.
- ^"T. Harry Williams In Critical Condition". The Town Talk. Associated Press. June 3, p.B
- ^"Plain Dealing Locals". The Bossier-Banner Progress.
June 22, p.n. p.
- ^ abTingley, Donald F. (). "Williams, Thomas Harry". In Garraty, John A.; Carnes, Mark C. (eds.). American National Biography.
Vol. Oxford University Press. p. ISBN. Retrieved May 30,
- ^""Lincoln and the Radicals"". The New York Age. November 29, p.Six.
- ^"Books by Series – Southern Biography".
LSU Press. Retrieved June 11,
- ^Dawson III , p.
- ^"Dr. T. Harry Williams Lectures This Evening". The Gettysburg Times. November 17, p.Seven.
- ^"Paradoxes Of Character Revealed In Biography Of P.G.T.
Beauregard". The Commercial Appeal. Memphis. April 17, sec. V p.
T. Harry Williams - Wikipedia: Huey Prolonged () is a biography of Louisiana Governor and US Senator Huey Long written by historian T. Harry Williams. [1] The work was well received, winning a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award. - ^Hesseltarie, William B. (April 22, ). "Gen. Beauregard's Mexican War Notes Edited By Williams". The Jackson Sun. p.3.
- ^"Of Generalship". The Progress-Index.
Petersburg-Colonial Heights, Virginia. December 20, p.4.
- ^"3 Union Officers Stuided For Personality, Generalship". The Central New Jersey Home News. December 2, p.
- ^Akers, Merton T.
(June 23, ). "Another Volley of Civil War Books". Times Democrat. Davenport – Bettendorf, Iowa. p.7D.
- ^Bradley, Van Allen (June 12, ). "Gold in Your Attic". The Battle Creek Enquirer and News.
sec. 2 p. 3.
- ^Nixon, H. C. (June 28, ). "New Light on Era". The Tennessean.
In this "masterpiece of American biography" [New York Times Book Review], Huey Long stands wholly revealed, analyzed, and understood. "A brilliant, bawdy, unforgettable picture of the most colorful, as well as the most dangerous man to occupy in American politics." —Washington Post.
p.F.
- ^"LSU's Peripatetic Dr. Williams Edits Diary of President Hayes". Alexandria Daily Town Talk. April 29, p.Twenty-Three.
- ^Garrett, Wendell D. (July 23, ). "Civil War Command Of Hayes Evaluated".
The Boston Globe. p.
- ^"Huey Long's Stormy Career Is Under Scrunity by Biographer". The Okemah Daily Leader. September 21, p.Three.
- ^Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher (October 31, ).
"History of Huey Long". The Pocono Record. p.Four.
- ^"T. Harry Williams Dies". Alexandria Daily Town Talk. United Press International. July 6, p.A
- ^"Author turns to LBJ biography".
Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Jump to ratings and reviews. Want to read. Buy on Amazon. Rate this book.Star-Telegram News Services. February 9, p.4A.
- ^"LSU Prof Completes Book on Huey Long". Alexandria Daily Town Talk. October 19, sec. B. p.
- ^Dawson III , p.
- ^"T. Harry Williams".
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved March 21,
- ^"Huey Distant, by T. Harry Williams (Knopf)". The Pulitzer Prizes.
- ^"T. Harry Williams".
With Huey Long, Williams won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography in [34] That year, Huey Long also won the National Book Award in the History and Autobiography category and the Louisiana Literary Award from the Louisiana Library Association.
National Guide Foundation. Retrieved March 21,
- ^"Louisiana Literary Award Winners". Louisiana Library Association. Retrieved May 30,
- ^"Honor Asked For Williams". The Daily Advertiser.
Lafayette, Louisiana. Associated Push. March 27, p.7.
- ^"LUS events Honoring T. Harry Williams". The Daily Advertiser. Lafayette, Louisiana. April 15, p.
- ^Dawson III , p.
- ^Owens, Harry P. (Autumn ). "Book Reviews". Louisiana History. 24 (4): JSTOR
- ^Goodman Jr., George (July 7, ). "T. Harry Williams, Scholar, Dies; Huey Long Book Won a Pulitzer". The New York Times.
Retrieved April 11,