User:Timathom/Lloyd T. Everett

Lloyd T Everett ...

Biography
Historian Lloyd Everett practiced law and researched, wrote and lectured on Confederate history. Everett studied law at George Washington University with the goal of writing southern history from a legal standpoint. He graduated in 1903, became a member of the Bars of Washington D.C., Maryland, Florida and North Carolina and was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court.

Everett wrote several articles on Confederate history published in the South Atlantic Quarterly, Southern Historical Association Papers and Tyler's Quarterly Historical and Genealogical Magazine. He also published a historical novel and co-edited the re-publication of R.G. Horton's A Youth's History of the Civil War, first published in 1866. Everett's other published works include several essays published in pamphlet form, as well as selected drafts of the unfinished work "Dixie's Story." Several chapters of the book, intended to cover the history of the southern states from the founding of Jamestown to the present, appear in 1950s issues of Tyler's Quarterly Historical and Genealogical Magazine. Everett also contributed to the field of southern history by giving lectures before historical associations in Washington D.C., Maryland, Virginia and Florida.

Works or publications

 * A youth's history of the War of 1861 [War between the states.
 * A youth's history of the great Civil War in the United States war between the states from 1861 to 1865.
 * A youth's history of the great civil war in the United States [war between the states] from 1861 to 1865.
 * Davis, Lincoln, and the Kaiser : some comparisons compared (national and international ethics, 1861 and 1914).
 * For Maryland's honor : a story of the war for Southern independence., ISBN 0970380216
 * Lincoln and imperialism.
 * Living Confederate principles: a heritage for all time.
 * Living Confederate principles: a heritage for all time. An address delivered by Lloyd T. Everett, of Washington camp no. 305, S.C.V., at the reception by the camp to the Confederate veterans of Washington, D.C., and vicinity, February 10, 1914, as revised and published in number 40, Southern historical society Papers.
 * Patrick R. Cleburne, prophet.
 * Was it anti-slavery? : (First prize essay, 1916, on "The causes that led to the War Between the States," in the Latham prize contest, which was inaugurated by the Sons of Confederate Veterans in 1915 ...).

Notes and references
William E. Brown, Jr. and Karen Hudson. "Guide to the Lloyd T. Everett papers," Miami, FL: University of Miami Libraries, [YYYY].