close

Burl Lee Noggle

Date of death: Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Number of Readers: 330

Known asBurl Noggle

SpecialtyAmerican historian

Date of birth 1 July 1924

Date of death 6 November 2013

Burl Lee Noggle was an American historian who from 1960 to 1995 was a professor at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Historian:
From 1955 to 1960, he taught Latin American history and Western Civilization at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces, New Mexico. In the fall of 1960, he came to LSU, where he focused primarily in the classroom upon historiography and Twentieth Century U.S. history. He taught survey courses, undergraduate classes, honors classes, graduate seminars, and special topics and readings courses. During several summers he taught at his alma mater, Duke, and at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Professor Noggle employed not only traditional methods of instruction but works of popular culture and fiction, including John Dos Passos’ U.S.A., film, photography, and popular music , to highlight U.S. history from 1900 to 1950. He added a new course "The Age of Roosevelt" to the LSU history offerings. He taught the seminar on historiography for twenty-five years. In his later years, he began to focus on the American West, a subject which had whetted his academic appetite while he lived in New Mexico.

Noggle published four books of history:

(1) Teapot Dome: Oil and Politics in the 1920's (1962), a study of the Teapot Dome scandal which tarnished the image of U.S. President Warren G. Harding;
(2) Into the Twenties: The United States from Armistice to Normalcy (1974), a look at the time from the end of World War I into the Harding administration;
(3) Working with History: The Historical Records Survey in Louisiana and the Nation, 1936-1942 (1981), and
(4) The Walter Lynwood Fleming Lectures in Southern History, 1937 – 1990: A Historiographical Essay (1993).
In addition, Noggle penned articles in professional journals and directed the work of more than seventy-five graduate students. In 1985, LSU designated Noggle as a "Distinguished Alumni Professor" for achievement in teaching. He was a reader of manuscripts submitted to the Louisiana State University Press and served on the Faculty Press Committee. Noggle was affiliated with the Organization of American Historians, the American Historical Association, and the Southern Historical Association.

Upon retirement from LSU in 1995, as professor emeritus. Noggle and his wife, Kathleen "Kate" Randall, remained in Baton Rouge. He died there in his library in their home at the age of eighty-nine. He had three children, Stephen L. Noggle (born 1953) of Morganton, North Carolina, Vanessa Noggle of Asheville, North Carolina, and Amy N. Ruhin of Atlanta, Georgia, and two grandchildren. A private service and interment was held at Greenoaks Memorial Park in Baton Rouge on Veterans Day 2013. A public memorial service was held on January 19, 2014, at the Lod Cook Alumni Center on the LSU campus.

Source: Wikipedia.org

Messages of Condolences

No messages, be the first to leave a message.

Send a Message of Condolences to Burl Lee Noggle

You must