The University of Mississippi: A Sesquicentennial History
| AUTHOR | Sansing, David G. |
| PUBLISHER | University Press of Mississippi (03/01/1999) |
| PRODUCT TYPE | Hardcover (Hardcover) |
Description
"There is a mystique about Ole Miss," David G. Sansing says in this book. Sansing, a professor emeritus of history, says the University of Mississippi and its story hold a special attraction for those who have learned there. "Some have called it holy ground, others hallowed ground. During a recent Black alumni reunion, Danny Covington called Ole Miss addictive." Few southern institutions have such a storied past. After its founding, the university assembled one of the finest scientific collections in the antebellum South. Closed during the Civil War, the university endured and reopened to expand from a liberal arts institution to one with highly developed professional schools. In the civil rights struggle Ole Miss became a battleground. Since 1963 the university has made remarkable progress in serving the racial and ethnic diversity of its constituency. Working with the university libraries, the Mississippi Department of Archives and History, and countless alumni, Sansing unfurls this 150-year history in The University of Mississippi: A Sesquicentennial History, a book he labored on since 1995. Capturing dramatic changes was key to Sansing's efforts. The university that began with four professors and boasted electric power in 1901 is now listed by Yahoo! as one of the nation's most "wired" universities, referring to the university's level of hardware and internet access. African American historian John Hope Franklin, who had visited the campus during the civil rights struggle, visited again in 1998 and found "a complete revolution in race relations on campus" and declared, "we don't have quite as far to go as we thought we did." Sansing says, "In a world of ravishing change, when Ole Miss alumni come back to Oxford, they do not just stroll across the campus and through the Grove, they retrace the steps of their forebears, not just over place and space, but back through time as well. "For many alumni, Ole Miss is more than their alma mater; it is a link, a nexus to who they were and are, to where they came from," Sansing says. "This sesquicentennial history is written for them--the students, faculty, friends, patrons, and alumni of the university."
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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13:
9781578060917
ISBN-10:
1578060915
Binding:
Hardback or Cased Book (Sewn)
Content Language:
English
More Product Details
Page Count:
432
Carton Quantity:
16
Product Dimensions:
6.34 x 1.45 x 9.50 inches
Weight:
2.05 pound(s)
Feature Codes:
Bibliography,
Index,
Dust Cover,
Illustrated
Country of Origin:
US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
History | United States - State & Local - South (AL,AR,FL,GA,KY,LA,MS,
History | History
History | Schools - Levels - Higher
Dewey Decimal:
378.762
Library of Congress Control Number:
98037388
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
jacket back
A 150-year history of Ole Miss, the state's oldest public institution of higher learning
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publisher marketing
"There is a mystique about Ole Miss," David G. Sansing says in this book. Sansing, a professor emeritus of history, says the University of Mississippi and its story hold a special attraction for those who have learned there. "Some have called it holy ground, others hallowed ground. During a recent Black alumni reunion, Danny Covington called Ole Miss addictive." Few southern institutions have such a storied past. After its founding, the university assembled one of the finest scientific collections in the antebellum South. Closed during the Civil War, the university endured and reopened to expand from a liberal arts institution to one with highly developed professional schools. In the civil rights struggle Ole Miss became a battleground. Since 1963 the university has made remarkable progress in serving the racial and ethnic diversity of its constituency. Working with the university libraries, the Mississippi Department of Archives and History, and countless alumni, Sansing unfurls this 150-year history in The University of Mississippi: A Sesquicentennial History, a book he labored on since 1995. Capturing dramatic changes was key to Sansing's efforts. The university that began with four professors and boasted electric power in 1901 is now listed by Yahoo! as one of the nation's most "wired" universities, referring to the university's level of hardware and internet access. African American historian John Hope Franklin, who had visited the campus during the civil rights struggle, visited again in 1998 and found "a complete revolution in race relations on campus" and declared, "we don't have quite as far to go as we thought we did." Sansing says, "In a world of ravishing change, when Ole Miss alumni come back to Oxford, they do not just stroll across the campus and through the Grove, they retrace the steps of their forebears, not just over place and space, but back through time as well. "For many alumni, Ole Miss is more than their alma mater; it is a link, a nexus to who they were and are, to where they came from," Sansing says. "This sesquicentennial history is written for them--the students, faculty, friends, patrons, and alumni of the university."
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Author:
Sansing, David G.
David G. Sansing is the author of "A History of the Mississippi Governor's Mansion" (with Carroll Waller), "Making Haste Slowly: The Troubled History of Higher Education in Mississippi", and "Mississippi: A Study of Your State" (with Ray Skates). In 1990, he was named Teacher of the Year at the University of Mississippi.
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