Connecting History to the Present

Major gift will bolster UM history department research and teaching efforts

Anne Twitty (left), UM associate professor of history, greets students during the Arch Dalrymple III Department of History’s undergraduate open house outside Bishop Hall. Photo by Thomas Graning/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services

OXFORD, Miss. – A $150,000 gift to the University of Mississippi‘s Arch Dalrymple III Department of History has better positioned the department to embrace long-range opportunities, such as supporting faculty with their research and teaching goals.

The unrestricted gift, for example, may be used to offset expenses associated with faculty summer writing grants or oral history initiatives, said Noell Wilson, chair of history.

“These help raise the profile of the department nationally while also serving the state of Mississippi and our surrounding community,” she said. “Gifts of this size, particularly to use at the department’s discretion, are rare but hold truly transformative potential to move forward a department’s research and teaching priorities.”

The gift was bequeathed to the university by the late Brig. Gen. John H. Napier III, a 1949 UM history graduate.

“I think he hoped the history department could use that money to pursue the appreciation of history and research,” said Cameron Freeman Napier, the donor’s wife, who maintains their home in Ramer, Alabama. “But the main thing is to advance the interests of students in the field of history.

“People don’t seem to study history that much and there’s a prevalence of presentism – whereby present-day thinking is imposed upon the past, rather than understanding the past and learning from it,” she continued. “Young people think, ‘Oh, what did the past have to do with me?’ Well it has everything to do with them. The main point is that you learn from it.”

Napier was a historian himself, and his book “Lower Pearl River’s Piney Woods: Its Land and People” was published by the university’s Center for the Study of Southern Culture in 1985. He also penned the “Air Force Officers Guide” and a history of his family. Napier and his wife both contributed a number of articles to the Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, which was developed by the university’s Center for the Study of Southern Culture.

In 1989, a previous gift from Napier to the university established a scholarship to help support students from Pearl River County and surrounding counties.

Napier retired from the U.S. Air Force in 1977 as a lieutenant colonel and worked in intelligence and special operations. He served in Vietnam as an expert in unconventional warfare and in national security at the Pentagon, and completed his career at Maxwell Air Force Base in Alabama.

After retirement from active duty, he joined the Alabama State Defense Force in 1991 and retired as a state brigadier general in 1997.

As an Ole Miss student, Napier was a Taylor Medalist and was active in Sigma Chi fraternity, Air Force ROTC, and on the student newspaper and yearbook staffs.

“We are thrilled by the opportunities these monies will provide to expand the range of projects both our faculty and students can embrace,” Wilson said. “I personally find this scale of contribution not only generous but also visionary as the Napier family could imagine the multiple ways in which private giving can change the course of individuals’ lives.”

Gifts can be made to the Brig. Gen. John H. Napier III Dalrymple Department of History Endowment by sending a check, with the fund’s name noted on the memo line, to the University of Mississippi Foundation, 406 University Ave., Oxford, MS 38655 or by giving online at https://give.olemiss.edu.

For information on including the university in estate plans, contact Dan Wiseman, senior director of gift planning, at 662-915-5944 or daniel@olemiss.edu.