Lauranett Lee
Lauranett Lorraine Lee (born c. 1956)[1] is an American historian, educator, curator, and author.[2] She is a professor at the University of Richmond, and the founding curator for African American History in the Virginia Museum of History and Culture.[3][4] She specializes in study of the Civil War, Reconstruction, Virginia state history, and African-American history. Early life and educationLauranett L. Lee was born in Chesterfield County, and was raised near Bon Air.[1] Lee's mother work as a computer operator for the U.S. Defense Supply Center.[1] Lee received a B.A. degree in communications from Mundelein College (now Loyola University Chicago) in Chicago;[5] followed by a M.A. degree from Virginia State University;[5] and a PhD in 2002 from University of Virginia.[2] She studied under Edgar Toppin at VSU, who greatly influenced her work.[1] Her doctoral thesis, Crucible in the Classroom: The Freedpeople and Their Teachers Charlottesville, Virginia, 1861–1876, was on the teachers of the freed people of Charlottesville, Virginia, such as Philena Carkin, a white northern schoolteacher who moved to Charlottesville to teach African Americans after the Civil War.[6] CareerLee had lived in Raleigh, Chicago and Atlanta before returning home to Virginia in 1988, to be closer to family.[1] She had started her career working as a teacher in middle school and high school with the Chesterfield County Public Schools.[1][7] From 2000 to 2016, Lee worked at the Virginia Historical Society, now the Virginia Museum of History and Culture. Starting in 2011, she led the development of a database called "Unknown No Longer: A Database of Virginia Slave Names," to help genealogist and families identify people who were once enslaved.[8] Lee wrote a book, "Making the American Dream Work: A Cultural History of African Americans in Hopewell, Virginia" (2008, Morgan James Publishing) on the cultural history of African Americans in Hopewell, Virginia.[5] She has appeared on C-Span.[9] She was appointed to an advisory council on Virginia's executive mansion.[10] She discussed the history of Juneteenth at Virginia governor Ralph Northam's press conference on making it a state holiday.[11] As of 2023, Lee is a candidate for Chesterfield County School Board in the Midlothian District.[12] Writings
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