He was married to Edna M. (Jones) Shannon (born November 10, 1891, and died January 2, 1953). They had five children: Lucile, Mary, Edna, Marjory and herpetologist Frederick A. Shannon, M.D.
Death
He died on February 4, 1963, just after beginning a semester as a visiting professor at the University of South Carolina.[4] He was buried with his wife in Mount Hope Cemetery, Urbana, Illinois.
Work
Shannon edited various publications and contributed to professional journals.[1] He wrote history from the perspective of average Americans, whose values he believed had shaped the United States. He had low regard for wealthy Americans.[5]
Since his death, some of Shannon's writing on Southern slavery has been criticized as being racist.[6] In fact, Shannon's own description of southern agriculture after the Civil War was strongly critical of the exploitation of black sharecroppers by white landowners.[7]
Selected bibliography
The Organization and Administration of the Union Army, 1861-1865 (1928)
The Farmer’s Last Frontier: Agriculture, 1860-1897 (1945, reprinted in 1968 online
American Farmers’ Movements (1957)
The Centennial Years: A Political and Economic History of America from Late 1870s to the Early 1890s (1967)
^National Archives Draft Registration card Serial No U 2017, dated April 27, 1942, for Fred Albert Shannon< Urbana Local Board No 1, Champaign, Illinois