On 30 July 1958, Bearss married author and teacher Margie Riddle of Mississippi (born 1925 or 1926), and the two had three children: Sara in 1960, Edwin Jr. in 1962, and Mary in 1965. In 2002, the couple lived in Arlington, Virginia.[2] Margie died c. 2006,[3] and Bearss died on 15 September 2020.[4]
In 1955, Bearss began working for the National Park Service (NPS) in Vicksburg, Mississippi. He prepared historical studies for the Interior Department agency and founded the Mississippi Civil War Roundtable. For the NPS, he found the Civil War-era cannonWidow Blakely (also Whistling Dick) which had been used in the Vicksburg campaign,[1] as well as the wreck of USS Cairo.[2] He also found two lost forts in Grand Gulf, Mississippi, and was party to "the establishment of Grand Gulf as a state military monument."[1] Bearss was the NPS' chief historian from 1981–1994, and "special assistant to the director for military sites" until 1995;[9] in 1991, he was made the NPS' chief historian of military sites. Bearss was also a commentator featured in the Ken Burns series, The Civil War.[5]
The Company of Military Historians made Bearss a fellow of that group in 1964, and he received the Nevins-Freeman Award in 1980 for his work on American Civil War (ACW) history. Three years later, the Department of the Interior awarded him the Distinguished Service Award, and it was followed by a commendation from the United States Secretary of the Army in 1985.[1] In 2011, Bearss received The Lincoln Forum's Richard Nelson Current Award of Achievement acknowledging his "contributions to the spirit of [Abraham] Lincoln in both word and deed."[11] On 23 April 2015, US RepresentativeGerry Connolly from Virginia introduced bill H.R.2059 to award Bearss the Congressional Gold Medal "in recognition of his contributions to preservation of American Civil War history and continued efforts to bring our nation's history alive for new generations through his interpretive storytelling."[12] In June 2018, the American Battlefield Trust awarded Bearss its first Lifetime Achievement Award "for his many decades dedicated to researching and relating the nation’s past to millions of people, as well as his advocacy for battlefield preservation."[13]
Publications
Decision in Mississippi. Jackson, Mississippi: Commission on the War Between the States. 1962.[14]
Fields of Honor: Pivotal Battles of the Civil War.[15]
Forrest at Brice's Cross Roads and in North Mississippi in 1864. Dayton, Ohio: Morningside Bookshop. 1979.[14]