Robert Byrd and the AHA
My main objection to Robert Byrd being honored by the AHA isn’t his segregationist past, authentically troubling as that is. If I were going to object to Byrd as Byrd, it might be as much for the fact that he’s one of the most over-the-top practicioners of pork-barrel politics in the last fifty years. When we drove through West Virginia this last summer, I began to wonder if there was anything in the state that wasn’t named for Byrd. My main objection than I don’t see why he in particular deserves an honorific from historians for his service to historical scholarship. I don’t doubt that the AHA leadership was able to come up with various and sundry alleged contributions they can attribute to him. Anybody who has dispensed as much federal largesse as Byrd must have dumped some of it in the laps of historians, over the years. I'm sure that the Association of Left-Handed Birdwatching Pipewelders For the Preservation of Albino Gophers could similarly honor Byrd. I’ll be curious to see if Jim McPherson’s remarks are published on the AHA website, given that I’m not at the meeting this week. It would take a lot to convince me that Byrd is somehow distinctively worthy of being honored above all other"public officials or civil servants" by an association of historical scholars. Can't we just give Daniel Patrick Moynihan a posthumous award? So my default assumption is that this is some kind of kiss-up undertaken for political reasons, scholars being amateur courtiers. Anybody at the meetings or elsewhere have any sense of what the motivations here are?

Byrd droppings.
Re: A bit more...
A bit more...
Re: A bit more...