ECU Libraries Catalog

A lifetime of change : Robert Lee Durham and the New South / William Allen Hunt.

Author/creator Hunt, William Allen author.
Format Archival & Manuscript Material
Production Info [2013?]
Description88 pages ; 28 cm
Supplemental Content http://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1398&context=etd
Subject(s)
Summary This thesis confronts how the era of the New South, 1877-1940, affected the person of Robert Lee Durham. Durham, born in 1870, grew up in a traditional North Carolinian home immediately following the Civil War and experienced the tensions related to Radical Reconstruction and witnessed the creation of the Ku Klux Klan in his hometown. As the South changed, so did Durham. Eventually he turned his back on an agrarian lifestyle and became an educator, inventor, and author. His choices caused him to confront racial miscegenation, the national Democratic Party, and his own family. However, after the death of his youngest brother, Durham devoted his remaining years to a personal reinvention in order to present himself as a traditional southern man to later generations. His personal papers drive this analysis of his life, a discussion of the South, racism, legacy, and what it meant to live through the New South.
Dissertation noteM.A. Iowa State University 2011
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 86-88).
Other formsAlso available via the World Wide Web.
Original versionPrintout. Originally published: Ames, Iowa : Iowa State University, 2011. 88 pages : digital, PDF file

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner NC Stacks F215 .H86 2011A ✔ Available Place Hold