Investigation of potential copyright issue

Please note this is about the text of this Wikipedia article; it should not be taken to reflect on the subject of this article.

Contents

  • Early years and education
  • Career
  • Research on Earl Kemp Long
  • Death
  • Legacy
  • References
  • Further reading

Do not restore or edit the blanked content on this page until the issue is resolved by an administrator, copyright clerk or OTRS agent.

If you have just labeled this page as a potential copyright issue, please follow the instructions for filing at the bottom of the box.

Questionmark copyright.svg

The previous content of this page or section has been identified as posing a potential copyright issue, as a copy or modification of the text from the source(s) below, and is now listed on Wikipedia:Copyright problems (listing):

User:Billy Hathorn cleanup ( Duplication Detector report  · Copyvios report )

Unless the copyright status of the text on this page is clarified, the problematic text or the entire page may be deleted one week after the time of its listing.

Temporarily, the original posting is still accessible for viewing in the page history .

Can you help resolve this issue?
Further information: Wikipedia:Copyright problems § Responding to articles listed for copyright investigation
If you hold the copyright to this text, you can license it in a manner that allows its use on Wikipedia. Click "Show" to see how.
  1. You must permit the use of your material under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA) and the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) (unversioned, with no invariant sections, front-cover texts, or back-cover texts).
  2. Explain your intent to license the content on this article's discussion page
  3. To confirm your permission, you can either display a notice to this effect at the site of original publication or send an e-mail from an address associated with the original publication to permissions-enAt sign.svgwikimedia.org or a postal letter to the Wikimedia Foundation. These messages must explicitly permit use under CC-BY-SA and the GFDL. See Wikipedia:Donating copyrighted materials.
  4. Note that articles on Wikipedia must be written from a neutral point of view and must be verifiable in published third-party sources; consider whether, copyright issues aside, your text is appropriate for inclusion in Wikipedia.
You can demonstrate that this text is in the public domain, or is already under a license suitable for Wikipedia. Click "Show" to see how.
Explain this on this article's discussion page, with reference to evidence. Wikipedia:Public domain and Wikipedia:Compatibly licensed may assist in determining the status.
Otherwise, you may write a new article without copyright-infringing material. Click "Show" to read where and how.

Your rewrite should be placed on this page, where it will be available for an administrator or clerk to review it at the end of the listing period. Follow this link to create the temporary subpage.

  • Simply modifying copyrighted text is not sufficient to avoid copyright infringement—if the original copyright violation cannot be cleanly removed or the article reverted to a prior version, it is best to write the article from scratch. (See Wikipedia:Close paraphrasing.)
  • For license compliance, any content used from the original article must be properly attributed; if you use content from the original, please leave a note at the top of your rewrite saying as much. You may duplicate non-infringing text that you had contributed yourself.
  • It is always a good idea, if rewriting, to identify the point where the copyrighted content was imported to Wikipedia and to check to make sure that the contributor did not add content imported from other sources. When closing investigations, clerks and administrators may find other copyright problems than the one identified. If this material is in the proposed rewrite and cannot be easily removed, the rewrite may not be usable.
State that you have created a rewrite on this article's discussion page.
About importing text to Wikipedia
Further information: Wikipedia:Copying text from other sources
  • Posting copyrighted material without the express permission of the copyright holder is unlawful and against Wikipedia policy.
  • If you have express permission, this must be verified either by explicit release at the source or by e-mail or letter to the Wikimedia Foundation. See Wikipedia:Declaration of consent for all enquiries.
  • Policy requires that we block those who repeatedly post copyrighted material without express permission.
Instructions for filing

If you have tagged the article for investigation, please complete the following steps:

  • Add the following to the bottom of Wikipedia:Copyright_problems/2019 September 27
    * {{subst:article-cv|Morgan D. Peoples}} from User:Billy Hathorn cleanup. ~~~~
  • Place this notice on the talk page of the contributor of the copyrighted material:
    {{subst:Nothanks-web|pg=Morgan D. Peoples|url=User:Billy Hathorn cleanup}} ~~~~
  • To blank a section instead of an entire article, add the template to the beginning of the section and {{ Copyvio/bottom }} at the end of the portion you intend to blank.
Morgan Dewey Peoples
Morgan Dewey Peoples (center) 001.jpg
Morgan D. Peoples is pictured in 1971 at historic Jamestown, Virginia, with two members on his educational tour, including Elmeanie H. McCain (1899–1981), a retired teacher from Colfax and later Baton Rouge (right).
Born
Morgan Dewey Peoples

(1919-02-01)February 1, 1919
Guin, Alabama, U.S.
DiedMay 25, 1998(1998-05-25) (aged 79)
Ruston, Louisiana, U.S.
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park
Ruston, Louisiana, U.S.
OccupationHistorian
Spouse(s)
Gwendolyn Sanderson(m. 1943)
Children2

Morgan Dewey Peoples (February 1, 1919 – May 25, 1998) was an American historian best known for coauthoring a biography of Earl Kemp Long with Michael L. Kurtz. Peoples was a member of the history faculty of Louisiana Tech University at Ruston from 1965 until his retirement in 1985. In 1991, Louisiana Tech honored Peoples with the title of professor emeritus.

Early years and education

Peoples was born and raised in Guin, Alabama. After his graduation from Guin High School, he worked for the Birmingham Post in Birmingham, Alabama. He then served during World War II in the United States Army Air Corps, the forerunner to the United States Air Force.

He received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Northwestern State University (then College) in Natchitoches. He obtained his Master of Arts degree in history from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. Thereafter, he taught history in junior or senior high school for fifteen years—in Nashville, Tennessee, Winnsboro, the seat of Franklin Parish, and then Ruston High School. He did not become a professor at Louisiana Tech until he was forty-six and was not required to obtain the terminal degree at that time to remain on the Tech faculty. Yet, he researched prolifically.

Career

Peoples was a popular professor who required students taking his Louisiana history course, many of whom were education majors, to write an "original" term paper using primary sources. It was his desire that the students research and write about important events that were not widely known in the body of historical literature. He would not accept regurgitation of already "settled" history but would permit students to offer serious new interpretations of established historical findings. Over the years, his students researched a plethora of previously unknown or relatively little known historical events covering a wide range of Louisiana history.

Peoples avoided injecting his personal attitudes, beliefs, or partisanship in his teaching. He offered the standard historical narrative but frequently detoured with other points of view and interesting stories and anecdotes that he had encountered in years of research and study. He was biased, however, in his love of Louisiana, but he did not let his patriotic spirit withhold truth that exposed the warts and flaws of the state and its leadership over the years. His "Peoples' Policies" instructed his students on exactly what would be expected of them.

He received many honors and awards for his teaching, including the first ever Louisiana State University at Alexandria award as "Outstanding Louisiana Historian" in 1973. He received the Louisiana Tech Faculty Senate "Good Teacher Award" for 1980.

In the 1970s, Peoples and a colleague, geography professor Ralph Douglas Pierce (1931–2009), [1] conducted college-credit bus tours of the United States. In 1971, for instance, the pair led some three dozen students in a tour of the East Coast, with stops in Virginia, Philadelphia, New York City, Boston, Maine, Nova Scotia, Quebec, Montreal, Detroit, Ohio, and Kentucky. In 1972, they conducted a trip to the American West, with stops at many historical sites and natural wonders, including Yellowstone. The tours were in demand, and students often found that the available seats were quickly taken.

For a dozen years, Peoples edited the North Louisiana Historical Association Journal, since renamed North Louisiana History . Early in 1969, he was named to succeed Max Bradbury of Shreveport as the journal editor. [2]

Peoples published many articles and book reviews during that time. In 1980, he penned for North Louisiana History "Henry Wirz: The Scapegoat of Andersonville", a study of Henry Wirz, a Louisiana physician and Confederate captain hanged for war crimes from his command of the prison of Union soldiers in Andersonville, Georgia. [3]

In 1975, Peoples was elected president of the Louisiana Historical Association. [4] His department chairman, William Y. Thompson, was the association president in 1980. Another colleague, John D. Winters, headed the group in 1968.

Research on Earl Kemp Long

For nearly two decades, Peoples researched the life of the colorful governor known as "Uncle Earl". He sought to separate fact from legend in his research. Long's flamboyant and seemingly endless career made it difficult and therefore time-consuming to research and write the book that Peoples had in mind. After years of studious endeavors, Peoples joined Kurtz, a colleague from Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, and they produced The Saga of Uncle Earl and Louisiana Politics, published in 1992.

A reviewer for Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge offered this synopsis of the Peoples-Kurtz book: Earl Long "was a raspy-voiced stump orator who in his speeches employed anecdotes, name-calling, and quotations from the Bible with equal facility. He was a rustic master of Louisiana politics who was suspected of consorting with known criminals and yet compiled one of the greatest records of reform for Louisiana’s poor in this century. Frequently referring to himself as 'the last of the red hot poppas [of politics],' Long correctly predicted that after him all politicians would have to learn to use the medium of television in campaigning. From his days on the campaign trail with his brother Huey P. Long, Jr., through the course of his own remarkable career, Earl Long came to epitomize the character of the powerful southern demagogue."

Peoples and Kurtz depict Earl Long’s role in the rise to power of his brother Huey, and they give a frank, unvarnished description of the no-hold-barred political tactics that Uncle Earl advocated. At one time, Earl turned against Huey and tried to get him indicted. This occurred one year when Huey opposed Earl's candidacy for lieutenant governor. The division was not resolved until future U.S. Senator Russell B. Long (1918–2003), Huey's oldest son, agreed to become Earl's executive counsel, more than a decade after Huey's assassination.

The authors show how Earl Long dedicated his own career to improving the lives of Louisiana’s masses, and they emphasize how in his unorthodox way Long became one of Louisiana's most progressive and effective governors. At the risk of his own political success, Earl Long was an early champion of civil rights, a fact the authors claim has generally been ignored. Long's defense of African Americans was overlooked at the time because of his own use of racial epithets and his desire to register black voters for his own political motives.

Kurtz and Peoples present new information from declassified FBI files concerning Long’s ties to organized crime figures, who gave him substantial sums of money to keep their illegal gambling operations flourishing. They also offer the first comprehensive account of Long's highly publicized stays in mental institutions in 1959, including an interpretation of the psychiatric and physical causes of his "breakdown", and provide factual information about Long's relationship with the stripper Blaze Starr.

By exploring Earl Long’s controversial life-style yet his strong family ties, his raw humor and his political savvy, his abuse of power, and his accomplishments in the areas of civil rights and public services, this biography, according to the reviewer, fills a serious gap in the history of modern Louisiana politics.

Death

Peoples died of long-term heart disease in Lincoln General Hospital in Ruston. Services were held on May 27, 1998, at the Kilpatrick Funeral Home Chapel in Ruston, with Dr. Dwight Ramsey, pastor of Grace United Methodist Church, officiating.

Peoples was survived by his wife of more than fifty-five years, the former Gwendolyn Sanderson (1921–2010), a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Sanderson and a native of Sulligent in Lamar County in northwestern Alabama. She was a secretary for twenty-two years at Grace United Methodist Church. Interment was in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Ruston. [5] The Peopleses had two sons, Dr. Kenneth Morgan Peoples (born 1949) of Arlington, Virginia, later Tucson, Arizona, and John Walter Peoples, Sr., (born 1951) and his wife, Mary McCreary (born 1948), of Shreveport; four grandchildren, John Walter Peoples, Jr. (born 1975), Kathryn Gwendolyn Peoples (born 1979), Mary Evelyn Peoples (also born 1979), and Carolyn McCreary Peoples, all then of Shreveport; and a brother, Eugene W. Peoples (born 1918) of Birmingham, Alabama.

Legacy

Glenn Ivy Jackson (born 1948), a retired banker in Bossier City, who holds bachelor's and master's degrees in history from Louisiana Tech and studied under Peoples in the late 1960s, recalls having last seen his former professor at a history fraternity banquet: "The last time that I saw him, he had suffered from heart disease and . . . wasn't doing well. He was a shriveled up man from what I remembered at Tech, had lost weight, and walked slowly. But he still had a great smile and genuine spirit. Peoples was one of those teachers who was comfortable with who he was. He wasn't interested in impressing folks with credentials or name dropping. He was homespun and cared about his students, totally lacking in pompous affectations."

Morgan Peoples' gravestone in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Ruston Morgan Peoples gravestone IMG 3806.JPG
Morgan Peoples' gravestone in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Ruston

The first ever "Morgan D. Peoples Graduate Scholarship in History" was awarded to Phillip Allison of Springhill, (Webster Parish), in 2005. The award aided Allison in writing his thesis: "More than Words: Human Rights and the Council of Europe, 1949–1960." The scholarship was established by his two sons, Kenneth and John Peoples, in memory of their father. Louisiana Tech has a similar scholarship for women graduate students doing research on Louisiana topics. It is named for the late State Representative Louise B. Johnson of Union Parish.

  • P vip.svg Biography portal
  • P history.svg History portal
  • Newspaper nicu buculei 01.svg Journalism portal
  • Diploma icon.png Education portal
  • Flag of Alabama.svg Alabama portal
  • Flag of Louisiana.svg Louisiana portal
  • Heinkel He 111 during the Battle of Britain.jpg World War II portal

Related Research Articles

Rupert Rudolph Peyton was an anti-Long member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from Shreveport, the seat of Caddo Parish, having served at-large for a single four-year term from 1932-1936. Peyton is also remembered as a North Louisiana journalist and historian.

References

  1. ↑ "Ralph Douglas Pierce". Farmerville Gazette, Farmerville, Louisiana . Retrieved April 19, 2011.Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ↑ "Tech Professor Named Editor of Historical Journal", Minden Press-Herald , February 19, 1969, p. 2
  3. ↑ Morgan D. Peoples, "Henry Wirz: The Scapegoat of Andersonville," North Louisiana History , Vol. 11, No. 4 (Fall 1980), pp. 3–18
  4. ↑ "Presidents of the Louisiana Historical Association". lahistory.org. Archived from the original on June 20, 2010. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  5. ↑ "Gwendolyn Sanderson Peoples". Shreveport Times, May 18, 2010.Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)

Further reading

  • Morgan Peoples obituary, Shreveport Times, May 26, 1998
  • http://www.latech.edu/technews/viewnews.cgi?category=1&id=1109363217%5B%5D
  • https://web.archive.org/web/20120204075218/http://louisdl.louislibraries.org/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=%2FLSA&CISOPTR=189
  • http://www.smarter.com/books-1/product/earl_k._long-495033/?source=inktomi_books495033%5B%5D
  • https://web.archive.org/web/20060910005905/http://www.lsu.edu/lsupress/Books/Lightning%20Source/Kurtz_Earl.htm
Preceded by
Bennett H. Wall
President of the Louisiana Historical Association

Morgan Dewey Peoples
1975–1976

Succeeded by
John L. Loos
Authority control OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
  • ISNI: 0000 0000 2372 4408
  • LCCN: n84119212
  • NTA: 131026348
  • VIAF: 72796075
  • WorldCat Identities (via VIAF): 72796075
This page is based on this Wikipedia article
Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply.
Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.