Английская Википедия:Alrutheus Ambush Taylor
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Alrutheus Ambush Taylor (1893–1954) was a historian from Washington D.C. He was a specialist in the history of blacks and segregation, especially during the Reconstruction Era.[1] The Crisis cited him as a "painstaking scholar and authority on Negro history".[2] An African-American, he taught at Tuskegee University in Tuskegee, Alabama, at the West Virginia Collegiate Institute in West Virginia, and at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. Following a grant from the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Fund, Taylor began researching the role of African Americans in the South during Reconstruction.[3] He authored The Negro in South Carolina During the Reconstruction in 1924, The Negro in the Reconstruction of Virginia in 1926, and The Negro in Tennessee, 1865-1880 in 1941.[4]
He died at Hubbard Hospital in Nashville, Tennessee, on June 4, 1954, at the age of 60.[5][6]
Early life and education
Taylor was born in Washington, D.C., the youngest of Lewis and Lucy Johnson Taylor's nine children.[7] He enrolled in the University of Michigan in 1910 and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics in 1916. Taylor was later rejected from the university's history graduate program by Ulrich B. Phillips, who cited Taylor's undergraduate focus in mathematics.[1] Carter G. Woodson financed Taylor's Master of Arts at Harvard University, where he completed his thesis entitled "The Social Conditions and Treatment of Negroes in South Carolina, 1865-1880" in 1923.[7] Taylor would finish his PhD at Harvard in 1935.[5]
His earliest two published books, The Negro in South Carolina During Reconstruction in 1924, and The Negro in the Reconstruction of Virginia, challenged the Dunning School of Reconstruction historiography.[5]
Publications
- The Negro in South Carolina During the Reconstruction
- The Negro in the Reconstruction of Virginia
- The Negro in Tennessee, 1865-1880
- "Negro Congressmen a Generation After"
- "The Movement of Negroes from the East to the Gulf States from 1830 to 1850"
References
- Английская Википедия
- 1893 births
- 1955 deaths
- 20th-century African-American writers
- 20th-century American historians
- 20th-century American male writers
- Academics from Washington, D.C.
- African-American historians
- American male non-fiction writers
- Harvard University alumni
- Historians of African Americans
- Historians of the Reconstruction Era
- Tuskegee University faculty
- University of Michigan alumni
- West Virginia State University faculty
- Writers from Washington, D.C.
- African-American male writers
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