Dwight L. DumondDwight Lowell Dumond (August 27, 1895 – May 30, 1976)[1] was an American Writer known for his distinguished works on slavery. He served as professor emeritus of American history at the University of Michigan.[2] Dumond was born in Kingston, Ohio on August 27, 1895.[1] He completed his undergraduate studies at Baldwin Wallace University in 1920 and graduated from Washington University in St. Louis with a master's degree in 1925. In 1929 he completed a PhD at the University of Michigan.[2] He taught history at Ohio Wesleyan University for one year before moving to the University of Michigan, where he taught from 1930 to 1965.[1] After his retirement from Michigan he taught at Howard University and Colgate University. He won an Ainsfield-Wolf Book Award for his book Antislavery in 1961, and was awarded an honorary doctorate from Northern Michigan University in 1965. The University of Michigan has a collection of his papers.[2] He and Gilbert H. Barnes were credited by Merton L. Dillon with reappraising the causes of the American Civil War.[3] Books
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