Neely was born in Texas. He earned his BA in American Studies and PhD in history at Yale University in 1966 and 1973. Yale's Graduate School awarded him a Wilbur Cross Medal in 1995.
In 1971–1972 Neely was a visiting instructor at Iowa State University. In 1972 he was named director of the Lincoln Museum in Fort Wayne, Indiana, a position he held for 20 years.
According to the review in the Journal of American History, his 2011 book Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation "is a meticulous study of Civil War-era constitutionalism, a complex and multifaceted book.... Neely has written what is perhaps the most important study of its kind to appear in the last 20 years."[4]
1985 – (with Gabor S. Boritt and Harold Holzer) Changing The Lincoln Image
1986 – (with R. Gerald McMurtry) The Insanity File: The Case of Mary Todd Lincoln
1987 – (with Boritt and Holzer) The Confederate Image: Prints of the Lost Cause
1990 – (with Holzer) The Lincoln Family Album
1991 – The Fate of Liberty: Abraham Lincoln and Civil Liberties (winner of the Pulitzer and Wiley prizes, as mentioned above)
1993 – (with Holzer) Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory: The Civil War in America
1993 – The Last Best Hope of Earth: Abraham Lincoln and the Promise of American (for which he received the Alpha Sigma Nu Book Award from the National Jesuit Honor Society)
1999 – Southern Rights: Political Prisoners and the Myth of Confederate Constitutionalism
2000 – (with Holzer) The Union Image: Popular Prints in the Civil War North
2002 – The Union Divided: Party Conflict in the Civil War North
2005 – The Boundaries of American Political Culture in the Civil War Eraonline
2007 – The Civil War and the Limits of Destruction
2011 – Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation: Constitutional Conflict in the American Civil War (covers the U.S. and the Confederate constitutions and their role in the conflict)
2017 – Lincoln and the Democrats: The Politics of Opposition in the Civil War
References
^Harold Holzer, “Afterword: On Mark Neely: An Appreciation.” in This Distracted and Anarchical People: New Answers for Old Questions about the Civil War-Era North, edited by Andrew L. Slap and Michael Thomas Smith, (Fordham University Press, 2013), pp. 201–06. JSTOR