HISTORY FACULTY MEMBER HONORED FOR CIVIL WAR SCHOLARSHIP
HISTORY FACULTY MEMBER HONORED FOR CIVIL WAR SCHOLARSHIP
MARTIN, Tenn. – The Houston (Texas) Civil War Round Table presented a University of
Tennessee at Martin faculty member an award for his American Civil War scholarship. Dr. Timothy B.
Smith, history lecturer in the Department of History and Philosophy, was presented the Frank E. Vandiver
Award of Merit in May. The award honors Smith’s contributions to the historiography of the Civil War
and his service as an author, National Park Service ranger, tour guide, speaker and preservationist during
a career spanning more than 20 years.
The Vandiver Award was first presented in 1982 and recognizes contributions to Civil War
scholarship or preservation efforts by an individual or an institution. Smith addressed the Houston Civil
War Round Table in March and is the award’s 40 th recipient.
“The HCWRT was extraordinarily fortunate to have a historian with the acclaimed stature of Dr.
Smith as the recipient of our award,” said round table President Gene Boisaubin in a news release
announcing the honor. “His presentation epitomized those same scholarship attributes as well as being
quite entertaining.”
The Mississippi native began teaching at UT Martin in 2007. He holds bachelor’s and master’s
degrees in history from the University of Mississippi and a doctoral degree from Mississippi State
University. In addition to many articles and essays, Smith is the author, editor, or co-editor of
approximately 20 books. His latest work, “Early Struggles for Vicksburg: The Mississippi Central
Campaign and Chickasaw Bayou, October 25-December 31, 1862” was released this year.
Smith was also featured in a 2020 three-night miniseries on The History Channel titled “Grant”
where he appeared as an expert historian on Civil War general and 18 th president of the United States,
Ulysses S. Grant. In the series, Smith focused predominantly on Grant’s strategy and success at the Battle
of Shiloh. While the battle only lasted two days, it was the bloodiest and most costly battle to date in the
Civil War.
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“My major area of research is the Civil War in the Mississippi Valley, which includes Grant’s
early war activity, so I’ve studied Grant thoroughly at Forts Henry and Donelson, Shiloh and on down to
Vicksburg,” Smith said in 2020. “Plus, I’m co-editor, with John F. Marszalek at Mississippi State
University’s Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library, of a book series with Southern Illinois University
Press entitled ‘The World of Ulysses S. Grant.’ So, I’ve been studying and working on Grant a while
now.” His work with The History Channel continued earlier this year when Smith appeared in the
“Abraham Lincoln” documentary that aired in February.
Smith teaches for the UT Martin McNairy County Center/Selmer, to the university’s other
regional centers through distance learning, and he also teaches for UT Martin Online. “We had one
student postpone his graduation due to his desire to take one of Dr. Smith’s classes the following
semester,” said Alan Youngerman, Selmer Center director. “We are proud of Dr. Smith and his receipt of
this award. UT Martin and the Selmer Center are lucky to have a history professor of his caliber and
reputation.”
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