Professor receives award for Civil War research
Geoffrey Ritter
Daily Egyptian
Ulysses S. Grant had an awful lot to say - so much that SIUC professor
John Y. Simon has been busy listening for decades.
"We had no idea that Grant had written that much," said Simon, a history
professor who began compiling the works of Ulysses S. Grant 42 years ago
and still has quite a few words to sift through. "We've gone through
anything that's personal or reflects his intellect. There's a lot of
it."
After publishing 26 volumes of "Papers of Ulysses S. Grant," Simon,
executive director of the Ulysses S. Grant Association at Morris
Library, received what many call long-overdue recognition for his work
from the Lincoln Forum, a non-profit organization he helped found that
is dedicated to increasing scholarly activity involving the 16th
president.
At a ceremony in Gettysburg, Penn., last month that coincided with the
anniversary of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, Simon was awarded the
Richard N. Current Award of Achievement, an achievement bestowed
annually to a person who contributes to the Abraham Lincoln legacy
through scholarly work.
In past years, the award, which has been given nine times, has gone to
such figures as actor Sam Waterston and former Sen. Paul Simon, who was
the director of SIUC's Public Policy Institute until his death in
December 2003.
Frank J. Williams, chairman of the Lincoln Forum and chief justice of
the Rhode Island Supreme Court, said Simon's work on the Grant papers
and his breadth of knowledge about Lincoln's life made him a natural
choice for this year's award.
"He's a great teacher, and he's very committed to his work," Williams
said. "He doesn't receive enough credit for what he does."
Simon, who received his master's and doctorate degrees from Harvard, was
teaching three classes a day at Ohio State University when a friend
suggested he edit Grant's papers in 1962. Simon moved on to SIUC in
1964, bringing along the project and gaining enthusiastic support from
then-SIU President Delyte Morris. In the more than 40 years that have
passed, Simon has edited 26 volumes of Grant's work and now expects to
edit eight more works.
Harold Holzer, vice chairman of the Lincoln Forum and vice president for
communications and marketing at the Metropolitan Museum in New York,
said Simon's academic pursuits are something that have been overlooked
for too long.
"He's one of the last great scholars," said Holzer, who has written
numerous books on the Civil War era and has co-edited two Lincoln Forum
books with Simon. "He's been very much in the Lincoln world over the
years, and he waited longer than he should have to get recognition."
Simon said Grant's writings, which range from military to presidential
to personal, stretch the entire range of his life. A graduate of West
Point, Grant served with little notice in the Mexican War and married in
1848. For 15 years he tried his hand at a wide range of businesses,
usually failing, and battled famously with alcoholism. At the beginning
of the Civil War, he was made a brigadier general in the Union army and
won acclaim for his leadership in the war's western theater, notably for
his victory at Vicksburg, Miss., in 1863.
After that triumph, he was put in command of the army's eastern forces,
which over two year's time he led to victory over Robert E. Lee's Army
of Northern Virginia. Three years later, he won the presidency on the
Republican ticket and served for two terms, eventually retiring to tour
Europe and pen his memoirs. Once again left penniless from more bad
business moves, Grant fell into depression at the end of his life, but
his family's fortunes were restored by the posthumous publication of his
memoirs.
Simon said Grant's legacy has been tarnished over time, mostly because
of the politics of his own era.
"Southerners never forgave him for using force against them," Simon
said. "It was the whole lost cause idea. Normally, he's rated one of the
less-successful presidents. I'd put him in the middle of the pack."
Stephen Hansen, an SIUE professor who teaches a Lincoln class with Simon
through the distance learning network, said Simon is as knowledgeable
about Lincoln, as he is Grant, and brings a unique presence to his
classroom lectures.
"Teaching with John is like having a tiger by the tail," Hansen said.
"I'm just along for the ride as he goes through the wealth of knowledge
he has to share."
In terms of gaining recent recognition from the Lincoln Forum, Simon
said it is a humbling honor and something that validates the work he has
spent so long doing.
"I'm delighted with it," Simon said. "It's a significant honor."
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