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News Release
| For immediate use |
July 10, 2006 -- No. 337 |
Local angles: Charlotte; Bedford, Va.
Photo: To download a photo, see end of story.
Family gives UNC Library letters
of Civil War soldier, endowment
CHAPEL HILL - After Robert W. Parker joined the Second Virginia Cavalry in
1861, he wrote to his loved ones whenever he could.
Some letters reflected the grueling life of the soldier - complaints about rations
and camp routines, requests for clothing, horses and ink. Others captured the
uncertainty of life in wartime:
"Dear Beck," he began in 1863 to his wife, Rebecca, "Though this
note may never reach you there is nothing like trying to get one to you [sic]
Of course, you have been in great suspense as to my being dead or alive."
Parker's letters, dating through almost all of the Civil War, now speak to modern
readers from a new home in the Southern Historical Collection of Wilson Library
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The Dooley family of Charlotte, Parker's descendents, recently donated the 350-item
Robert W. Parker Papers to the library. The family also established the Parker-Dooley
Fund for Southern History with a gift of $250,000 to the Southern Historical
Collection.
The gift counts toward the university's Carolina First Campaign goal of $2 billion.
Carolina First is a comprehensive, multi-year, private fund-raising campaign
to support Carolina's vision of becoming the nation's leading public university.
"This is the final chapter and a new beginning in the journey of a family
treasure that started with my great-grandfather's first letter," said David
Dooley, executive vice president at Charlotte-based R.T. Dooley Construction
Co.
The papers complement strong Civil War collections already held by the UNC Library,
said Tim West, manuscripts curator and director of the Southern Historical Collection.
"We have hundreds of collections featuring letters from soldiers,"
West said. "However, it's rare to see a run of correspondence that covers
the war in Virginia from the very beginning to the very end." Approximately
300 of the letters are from Parker to his wife, his parents and other relatives.
West expects the collection to attract researchers interested in military life
and in the way the war affected families. "You come to understand that
these were real people living day-by-day in extremely trying circumstances,"
said West. "You get a sense of what the typical Confederate soldier felt
and understood about what was happening."
The human dimension of the story is heightened, West said, by its end. Although
Parker saw relatively little combat over the course of the war, he was killed
in 1865 at Appomattox Courthouse, the war's final battle before the surrender
of Robert E. Lee. He died just 40-50 miles from his home near Bedford, Va.,
which then was called Liberty.
The saga of the letters did not end with Parker's death. In recent years, the
Dooley family had the letters professionally conserved, transcribed and bound.
They also consulted Dr. Peter S. Carmichael, a historian at the University of
North Carolina at Greensboro.
Carmichael enlisted one of his students, Catherine Wright, who graduated recently
with a master's degree in history. Over the past year, Wright annotated the
transcripts, explaining and identifying places and people mentioned in the letters.
She also wrote analyses of Parker's views and an introduction, then grouped
these elements and the transcripts into a proposed book. Her collection, with
the working title "Lee's Last Casualty: The Civil War Letters of Robert
W. Parker," is being considered for publication.
The transcripts are especially helpful because many of the originals are hard
to read, West said: "They reflect the conditions in which they were written.
Some of the papers are poor-quality scraps, with torn sections and worn areas,
and with cramped writing that makes use of every available inch."
When the time came to find a home for their treasured documents, the Dooleys
turned to family friend Erskine Bowles, president of the 16-campus University
of North Carolina. Bowles connected the Dooleys with the Southern Historical
Collection.
West's plans for the Parker-Dooley Fund honor this UNC connection. A key use
of the endowment will be a competitive stipend to support graduate students
and young faculty from UNC institutions other than UNC-Chapel Hill who wish
to conduct research in the Southern Historical Collection. West also will establish
a Parker-Dooley Award to recognize excellent writing by Carolina students based
on Southern Historical Collection holdings.
"I could not be more excited about the impact the Parker-Dooley Fund can
have on the lives of faculty, students and visiting scholars," David Dooley
said. "As my family and I grow our business, we have come to realize the
competitive advantage intellectual capital plays in our success. A strong university
system plays into our strategy and raises the knowledge tides for all North
Carolinians."
The Southern Historical Collection in Wilson Library is open from 9 a.m. to
6 p.m. Mondays through Fridays and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays. For more information,
call (919) 962-1345.
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Photo URL: http://www.unc.edu/news/pics/event/dooleyevent2.jpg
Suggested cutline: Cousins Caroline Dooley, 9, Catherine Dooley, 13, and Nancy Lee McLean, 11, examine the Civil War letters of their great-great-great-great grandfather, Robert W. Parker in the Southern Historical Collection at UNC-Chapel Hill's University Library. Parker's descendants have donated the letters to the library with a gift establishing the Parker-Dooley Fund for Southern History.
Note: West can be reached at (919) 962-1345, timwest@email.unc.edu; Carmichael, at (336) 378-9379; Wright, at (336) 508-6992, cathywright23@gmail.com
UNC Library contacts: Judith Panitch, (919) 962-1301, panitch@email.unc.edu; Dr. Tim West, (919) 962-1345, timwest@email.unc.edu
News Services contacts: Print, L.J. Toler, (919) 962-8589; broadcast,
Karen Moon, (919) 962-8595