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James I. Robertson Jr., Exacting Civil War Historian, Dies at 89

James I. Robertson Jr., an authority on the Civil War who published several dozen deeply researched books that humanized historical figures like Stonewall Jackson, died on Nov. 2 at a hospital in Richmond, Va. He was 89.

His wife, Elizabeth Lee Robertson, said the cause was complications of metastatic cancer. He had taught at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg for 44 years.

Dr. Robertson, who went by Bud, wrote books that appealed to general audiences as well as academics.

“History is human emotion,” he said in an interview for “Dr. Bud, The People’s Historian,” a documentary film scheduled to be released next year, and it “should be the most fascinating subject in the world.”

In addition to his wife, whom he married in 2010 and with whom he lived in Westmoreland County, Va., he is survived by two sons, Howard and James III; a daughter, Beth Brown; a stepson, William Lee Jr.; a stepdaughter, Elizabeth Anderson Lee; seven grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. His first wife, Elizabeth Green, died in 2008.

Dr. Robertson lectured about the Civil War and acted as a historical adviser for the 2003 Civil War film “Gods and Generals.” He retired from Virginia Tech in 2011 and afterward wrote and edited several more books, most recently “Robert E. Lee: A Reference Guide to His Life and Works” (2018).

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