Douglas L. Wilson (born November 10, 1935) is the George A. Lawrence Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of English at Knox College in
Galesburg, Illinois, where he taught from 1961 to 1994. He then was the founding director of the Robert H. Smith International Center for Jefferson Studies at the Thomas Jefferson Foundation (Monticello) in Charlottesville, Virginia. In his retirement, he returned to Knox College to found and co-direct the Lincoln Studies Center with his colleague Rodney O. Davis.
Wilson is also a two-time winner of the
Lincoln Prize for Lincoln's Sword: The Presidency and the Power of Words, published in November 2006, as well as Honor's Voice in 1999.
Honors/grants
Order of Lincoln,
Lincoln Academy, inducted Wilson a Laureate of
The Lincoln Academy of Illinois and awarded the *Order of Lincoln (the State's highest honor) by the Governor of Illinois in 2009 as a Bicentennial Laureate, 2009.[1]
“Thomas Jefferson and the Legacy of a National Library,” Wilson Library Bulletin, 64:6 (February 1990), 37–41.
"Abraham Lincoln, Ann Rutledge, and the Evidence of Herndon's Informants," Civil War History, 36.4 (1990): 301–24.
"What Jefferson and Lincoln Read" [cover story], The Atlantic Monthly, 267.1 (1991): 51–62.
"Abraham Lincoln's Indiana and the Spirit of Mortal," Indiana Magazine of History LXXXVII.2 (1991): 155–70.
“Abraham Lincoln and ‘that fatal first of January,’” Civil War History, 38:2 (June 1992), 101–130.
"Thomas Jefferson and the Character Issue" [cover story], The Atlantic Monthly, 270:5 (1992): 57–74.
“Dating Jefferson’s Early Architectural Drawings,” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 101:1 (January 1993), 53–76.
"Abraham Lincoln and 'that fatal first of January,'" Civil War History 38.2 (1992): 101–130.
"Thomas Jefferson's Library and the Skipwith List,"
Harvard Library Bulletin New Series 3.4 (1992–93): 56–72.
"William H. Herndon and his Lincoln Informants," Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 14.1 (1993): 15–34.
"Jefferson and the Republic of Letters, " in Jeffersonian Legacies, edited by Peter S. Onuf. University Press of Virginia (1993): 50–76.
“Thomas Jefferson's Library and the French Connection,” Eighteenth-Century Studies, 26:4 (Summer 1993), 669–85.
"Editing Herndon's Informants," The Lincoln Herald 95.4 (1993 [1994]): 115–23.
"William H. Herndon and the 'Necessary Truth,'" in Abraham Lincoln in the American Mind: Papers from the Eighth Annual Lincoln Colloquium ed. Linda Norbut Suits and
George Painter. Lincoln Home National Historic Site (1994): 31–41.
"A Most Abandoned Hypocrite" [unrecorded Lincoln satire],
American Heritage 45.1 (1994): 36–49.
"The Unfinished Text of the Lincoln-Douglas Debates," Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 15.1 (1994): 70–84.
"Lincoln's Affair of Honor," The Atlantic Monthly 281.2 (1998) 64–71.
"Lincoln and Lovejoy," "We Cannot Escape History": Papers from the Eleventh Annual Lincoln Colloquium ed. Linda Norbut Suits and Timothy P. Townsend.
Lincoln Home National Historic Site, 1999.
"Jefferson and Literacy," in Thomas Jefferson and the Education of a Citizen, ed.
James Gilreath.
Library of Congress (1999): 79–90.
"Collaborating with the Past: Remarks on Being Awarded the Lincoln Prize," in Accepting the Lincoln Prize: Two Historians Speak (2000): 39–56, (Gettysburg College).
"William H. Herndon and Mary Todd Lincoln," Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 22.2 (2001): 1–26.
"Young Man Lincoln," in The Lincoln Enigma: The Changing Faces of an American Icon ed. Gabor S. Boritt.
Oxford University Press (2001): 20–35.
"A Note on the Text of Lincoln's Second Inaugural," Documentary Editing 24.2 (2002): 37–41
"The Evolution of Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia," Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 112.2 (2004): 99–133.
"Herndon’s Dilemma: Abraham Lincoln and the Privacy Issue," Lincoln Lore 1877 (2004): 2–10.
"Lincoln and Lovejoy," "We Cannot Escape History": Papers from the Eleventh Annual Lincoln Colloquium ed. Linda Norbut Suits and Timothy P. Townsend.
Lincoln Home National Historic Site, 1999.
"Lincoln and Abolition," History Now Issue 6, (online), 2005.
"They Said He was a Lousy Speaker," Special Lincoln Issue, Time (July 4, 2005), 68–69.
"Reflections on Lincoln and English Studies," College English, 72:2 (December 2009), 156–57.
"Abraham Lincoln and the Shaping of Public Opinion," in Lincoln's Legacy of Leadership, ed. George R. Goethals and Gary L. McDowell, 2010.
"The Once and Future Gettysburg Address," Long Remembered: Lincoln and His Five Versions of the Gettysburg Address, Commentary by Lloyd A. Dunlap, David C. Mearns, John R. Sellers, and Douglas L. Wilson (Library of Congress in Association with the Levenger Press, 2011), 87–94, 109–12.
"His Hour Upon the Stage," The American Scholar (Winter 2012), 60–69.
'Public Opinion is Everything:' Lincoln the Communicator," in Lincoln: A President for the Ages, ed. Karl Weber (New York: Public Affairs, 2012), 183–95.
"The Power of the Negative," The Wall Street Journal, Jan. 17, 2013.
"Lincoln's Rhetoric," Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association, 34:1 (Winter 2013), 1–17.
"Lincoln Answers His Critics," New York Times, June 12, 2013.
"William H. Herndon on Lincoln's Fatalism," Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association, 35:2 (Summer 2014), 1–17.
"Nothing Equals Macbeth: Notes on Lincoln's Fatal Attraction," in Nation and World, Church and God: The Legacy of Garry Wills, ed. Kenneth L. Vaux and Melanie Baffes, Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press, 2014, 83–99.
"A Book to Remember," The American Scholar, Online edition, Jan. 26, 2015.
"Lincoln through the Lens of History: An Interview with Douglas L. Wilson," Lincoln Lore, No. 1914 (Spring 2017).
Lectures and papers
"Thomas Jefferson's Library and the French Connection," Symposium on "Publishing and Readership in Revolutionary France and America," Library of Congress, May 2–3, 1989.
"Herndon and His Lincoln Informants," Abraham Lincoln Association Symposium, Old State Capitol, Springfield, Illinois, February 12, 1991.
"Thomas Jefferson: The Man Who Couldn't Live Without Books," Jefferson Commemorative National Lecture Series. Delivered at American Antiquarian Society,
Worcester, MA,; The Newberry Library,
Chicago, IL,; The Florida Center for the Book,
Ft. Lauderdale, FL.
"Jefferson and Literacy," Library of Congress Research Conference: "Thomas Jefferson and Citizenship," May 13–15, 1993.
"Abraham Lincoln and his Legacy: From Emancipation to Barack Obama," Lecture Tour,
People's Republic of China, sponsored by the U. S. State Department, September 14–30, 2009.
"Words Fitly Spoken: Lincoln and Language," Library of Congress Bicentennial Symposium, March 4, 2009.