history department at the College of Charleston,
this prize is awarded by a committee which determines the best book
published
about South Carolina
history.
Olejniczak says, “It is a significant accomplishment for a historian.” Poole
said he “much appreciated it as there are so many outstanding works
published
by Southern historians about our state.”
Poole received his master’s degree in religion
at the Harvard Divinity
School and earned his doctorate
in American History at the University
of Mississippi. His
dissertation at Ole Miss would become the topic of his first book.
Poole teaches several classes in both
history and
religion. His classes include History of South Carolina,
which he says he “enjoys teaching more than anything else,” Society and
Culture
of Early Charleston, Religion in the American South, and South
Carolina in the New South. He is working on
another
class, African American Religion, which will be offered in the near
future.
His book, “Never Surrender: Confederate
Memory and
Conservatism in the South Carolina Upcountry,” focuses on the “Lost
Cause” movement in the post Civil War South. The book covers such issues as
how the Confederacy
was remembered and celebrated in South Carolina
after the Civil War. It examines the role this perception played in
society on
such issues as politics and religion. In his book, Poole explains that, “Southern conservatives used the Lost Cause movement to
define
and encode the boundaries of racial identity, to reaffirm antebellum
attitudes
regarding gender, and to express a revived Confederate nationalism.” Poole believes that elements of the “Lost Cause” movement still linger in the
South
today.
Poole says “Teaching
and writing go
hand in hand” and he uses his book in his History of South Carolina
class. In
the book acknowledgments he says that the interaction he has with his
students is very beneficial to his work and rewarding for himself as a
writer
and a teacher.
Other books Dr. Poole has been involved with
are “Vale of
Tears," a collection of essays on religion and reconstruction that will
be released in November 2005. He has an essay published in this work
and is
also the co-editor. Also coming out in November is “South Carolina
Civil War” which
is a narrative history of the Civil War in South Carolina
and is written for a more popular audience, according to Poole.
He is also working on a book about the First South Carolina African,
the first
federalized, black union regiment based out of Beaufort
S.C. This book will be
published by the University
of Florida Press.
For students who are interested in pursuing
studies in
history and writing, Poole recommends thinking
about
more nontraditional careers. Because there is such a small market for
professors, he says it is important to consider “using a history degree
for
something other than teaching, such as public history archives, museum
work,
law or government.”
Apart from teaching and writing, Poole
enjoys kayaking in the surrounding Charleston
areas. This is his favorite way to relax when the weather permits, he
says.
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