Everyone,
These talks next week are free and open to the public.
"Something Like Glory: The True History of Black Soldiers in the Civil War"
March 27, 2013
Time: Noon
Location: University Student Commons Forum Room
Fee: Free
Part of the VCU Year of Freedom Brown Bag Discussion lunch series, this presentation will be given by Andrew H. Talkov, a historian with the Virginia Historical Society. For more information or special accommodations, contact Ryan K. Smith, Department of History, at (804) 828-1635 or [log in to unmask]
"Intensely Human: The Health of Black Soldiers in the American Civil War"
March 27, 2013
Time: 5:30-7 p.m.
Location: Grace Street Theater, 932 W. Grace St.
Fee: Free
“Intensely Human: The Health of Black Soldiers in the American Civil War,” will be presented by Margaret Humphreys, M.D., Ph.D., Josiah Charles Trent Professor in the History of Medicine, Duke University, and editor of the Journal of the History of Medicine. A specialist in the history of science and medicine, Dr. Humphreys’ research focuses primarily on infectious disease in the United States and the American south, while her current research explores the history of medicine during the Civil War. Until the last half of the 20th-century, diseases such as malaria, yellow fever, pellagra and hookworm marked the south as tropical, impoverished and strikingly different from the rest of the United States.
See you there,
John
John T. Kneebone
5107 Caledonia Road
Richmond, VA 23225
[log in to unmask]
804-231-1774
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