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      • The best evaluation of Nevins is the essay entitled "Allan Nevins, Historian: A Personal Reminiscence," written by Ray Allan Billington in his compilation on Allan Nevins on History (1975). The book contains essays by Nevins on a variety of topics and is an excellent introduction to his work.
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Allan_NevinsAllan Nevins - Wikipedia

    Joseph Allan Nevins [1] (May 20, 1890 – March 5, 1971) was an American historian and journalist, known for his extensive work on the history of the Civil War and his biographies of such figures as Grover Cleveland, Hamilton Fish, Henry Ford, and John D. Rockefeller, as well as his public service.

  3. literary historians. Ordeal of the Union is perhaps the best ex ample of grand narrative history written in our times. Nevins had a story to tell, and no one could tell it with as much vigor and color and drama as he. It is regrettable that he is almost the last of a vanishing breed. When the first two volumes of Ordeal of the Union ap

  4. One of Nevins' give a common stamp or brand to most the important contributions has been efforts of the greatest historians, his re-creation of the lives of indi- certain characteristics of manner, viduals in past history.

  5. Allan Nevins was an American historian, author, and educator, known especially for his eight-volume history of the American Civil War and his biographies of American political and industrial figures. He also established the country’s first oral history program.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Jun 8, 2018 · The best evaluation of Nevins is the essay entitled "Allan Nevins, Historian: A Personal Reminiscence," written by Ray Allan Billington in his compilation on Allan Nevins on History (1975). The book contains essays by Nevins on a variety of topics and is an excellent introduction to his work.

  7. In June 1960, Theodore Sorenson, advisor to then senator John F. Kennedy, asked the historian Allan Nevins to help in drafting the speech Kennedy would deliver in accepting the presidential nomination of the Democratic Party at its upcoming national convention in Los Angeles.

  8. Gerald L. Fetner, Immersed in Great Affairs: Allan Nevins and the Heroic Age of American History (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2004), provides a solid assessment of Nevins’s historical writings but makes no mention of his work as chairman of the Civil War Centennial Commission.