Thursday, March 26, 2009

John Hope Franklin, 1915-2009, Rest in Peace

I only met John Hope Franklin twice. The first time was at the Citadel Conference on the Civil Rights Movement in 2003. He was gracious and spoke with me for a few minutes and I naturally felt blessed just to have gotten him to acknowledge me. The second time was at one of the recent meetings of the Southern Historical Association. I just wanted to say hello, mentioned the Citadel conference, and because he was that kind of man, he fibbed and said he remembered.


Because of these two brief meetings, and because of the monumental nature of his work as the practical founder of African American history, it was with more than ordinary sadness that I learned about Professor Franklin's passing on Wednesday. He was 94.


Franklin holds a remarkable place in American historical scholarship. He is not known for any particular interpretive schools or historiographical debates, largely because he practically established the school and the historiography. His most famous book, From Slavery to Freedom, is still in use after several revisions. His memoir, Mirror to America, is a model of the historian's autobiography, with the added advantage that Franklin was a historian who made history, a thing so rare that you would excuse most people for thinking it nonexistent.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the post, I'm in Seattle at the Organization of American Historians conference. J.H. Franklin has been mentioned several times at the conference in different sessions. As a young, scholar-in-the-making, I'm thinking who will ever fill Franklin's shoes, could this possibly be done?
tramaine.

dcat said...

Tramaine --
I'm not sure anyone needs to fill Franklin's shoes. Which is good, because I'm not sure anyone could. But the field has many young, vibrant, talented historians who owe him an enormous debt.
Hope you enjoyed Seattle and the OAH.

dcat

Anonymous said...

Absolutely. Seattle was fantastic and OAH, well I'll comment on that in a e-mail. As for the book exhibit, you should have warned me.
t.

dcat said...

Looking forward to hearing your impressions. What, specifically, about the book exhibit warranted warning? The abundance of books? The chaos? The jackasses scanning your identification badge to determine if you could help their career and thus were worth their time?

dcat