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  1. Douglas Southall Freeman was born May 16, 1886, in Lynchburg, Virginia, to Bettie Allen Hamner and Walker Burford Freeman, an insurance agent who had served four years in Robert E. Lee 's Army of Northern Virginia. From childhood, Freeman exhibited an interest in Southern history. In Lynchburg, his family lived at 416 Main Street, [2] near the ...

  2. Pulitzer Prize. Subjects Of Study: Confederate States of America. Douglas Southall Freeman (born May 16, 1886, Lynchburg, Va., U.S.—died June 13, 1953, Westbourne, Hampton Gardens, near Richmond, Va.) was an American journalist and author noted for writings on the Confederacy. After receiving degrees from Johns Hopkins University and ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. May 17, 2018 · The American journalist Douglas Southall Freeman (1886-1953) was one of the major biographers in the United States during the 20th century. Douglas Southall Freeman was born at Lynchburg, Va., on May 16, 1886, the son of a Confederate veteran. His family soon moved to Richmond, where Freeman was educated.

  4. Jan 16, 2012 · Douglas Southall Freeman was not only an indispensable historian, he was a giant of an intellect who understood and articulated the very real virtues of “States Rights.” Son of a Confederate Veteran, Freeman was present for the dedication of the Lee Statue and other statues on Richmond’s famous Monument Avenue—he met and lived with the legacy of the honored veterans.

    • Len Riedel
  5. In 1886, Douglas Southall Freeman, son of a former Confederate soldier, was born in Lynchburg, Virginia. Freeman was a bright youth, and studied at Richmond College (now University of Richmond), obtaining a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University by the time he was 22 in 1908. Freeman served as the editor of the R ichmond News Leader for 34 years ...

  6. Douglas Southall Freeman was a biographer, a newspaper editor, a nationally renowned military analyst, and a pioneering radio broadcaster. He won the Pulitzer Prize twice: the first, in 1935, for his four-volume biography of the Confederate general Robert E. Lee; and the second, posthumously in 1958, for his six-volume biography of George Washington, with a seventh volume written by John Alexander Carroll and Mary Wells Ashworth after Freeman's death in 1953. Read more about: Douglas ...

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  8. Nov 26, 2012 · H.G. Nicholas | Published in 26 Nov 2012. With the death at Richmond, Virginia, of Douglas Southall Freeman, the United States has lost a great Southerner, a distinguished newspaper editor and one of the most notable representatives of that declining species, the amateur historian. The South has always been famous for the loyalty it inspires in ...