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David R. Chesnutt

American historian and editor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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David Rogers Chesnutt (1940 – December 15, 2014) was an American historian and editor.

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Life

Chesnutt was born in Athens, Alabama, and earned academic degrees at University of Alabama (1962), Auburn University (1967) and the University of Georgia (1973).[2]

Chesnutt was in the History Department at the University of South Carolina for 35 years as Research Professor. His major work was The Papers of Henry Laurens, serving as Associate Editor and then Editor. As part of that project he was influential in moving the scholarly editing project to digital technologies, which was ground-breaking at the time.[2]

For more than two decades Chesnutt served on the South Carolina Historical Records Advisory Board.[2] He was an important figure in the foundation and early development of the Text Encoding Initiative and active in the Association for Computers and the Humanities.[3][4]

In 2005 Chesnutt was awarded the Order of the Palmetto, South Carolina's "highest civilian honor for extraordinary lifetime achievement and service to the state and nation".[5][6][7]

Chesnutt died in Hardwick, Vermont, on December 15, 2014, of throat cancer.[1][8]

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Awards

Selected works

volumes 5–10 edited by George C. Rogers and Chesnutt; volumes 11–16 edited by Chesnutt and C. James Taylor; LCCN 67-29381
  • South Carolina's Expansion into Colonial Georgia, 1720–1765, New York: Garland Pub., 1989, LCCN 89-7774

References

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