User:DonaldSFrazier

Donald S. Frazier is a professor of history at McMurry University in Abilene, Texas as well as an adjunct professor of history at Schreiner University in Kerrville, Texas. He is the award-winning author of several books on the Civil War including Blood and Treasure (1996), Cottonclads (1998), Fire in the Cane Field (2009), Thunder Across the Swamp (2011), and Blood on the Bayou. His other work includes serving as co-author of Historic Abilene (2000), Frontier Texas (2004), Abilene Landmarks (2009), and The Texas You Expect (2007), as well as general editor of The U.S. and Mexico at War (1998) and a collection of Civil War letters, published as Love and War (2010).

In addition to his teaching duties, Frazier has been very involved in a variety of heritage and cultural tourism projects, including consulting on the development of three museums, two research centers, a Mexican War battlefield, work on Civil War and frontier heritage trails in Texas, New Mexico, and Louisiana, and work on historical projects in Europe and Mexico. He also helped Abilene, Texas achieve recognition as a Preserve America city and grant recipient. He is the writer and director for the video Our Home, Our Rights: Texas and Texans in the Civil War, a winner of the Mitchell Wilder Award for Excellence in Publications and Media Design from the Texas Association of Museums and serves as the introductory media at the Texas Civil War Museum in Fort Worth, Texas.

Frazier is also active in historic preservation projects. He is currently serving as President and CEO of the McWhiney History Education Group, a Texas-based educational non-profit. He has served as a consultant with several communities as they develop their heritage and cultural assets, and has been recognized for his efforts by numerous organizations including the Daughters of the American Revolution, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, American Association for State and Local History, The Texas Historical Foundation, the Historical Society of New Mexico, and the Louisiana Historical Association.

Dr. Frazier has received accolades and honors for his contributions to the historical dialogue in the United States and was chosen for a military history fellowship at the United States Military Academy at West Point and a fellowship at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. He is in high demand as a thinker, consultant, and speaker. Frazier is also an elected member of the prestigious Philosophical Society of Texas, the oldest learned organization in the state and is also a fellow of the Texas State Historical Association.