On Oct. 23, Russell J. Levenson Jr. will present some of the American stories of faith he’s collected throughout the years in his new book, “Witness to Belief: Conversations on Faith and Meaning,” at The Poinsett Club, 807 E. Washington St., Greenville.
The ordained Episcopal priest and author will sign books at 5 p.m., with his presentation beginning at 6 p.m. The event is sponsored by the American History Book Club and Forum and Furman University.
For information and to purchase tickets for $50, visit furman.edu/ahbc email ahbc@furman.edu or call 864-294-3351. Proceeds from ticket sales support the work of two area teachers and a local student through the A.V. and Kate Huff History Scholars awards.
The award winners will also be recognized at the event. The awards are named for A.V. Huff, a former Furman professor, dean and vice president of academic affairs, and his wife Kate Huff, a former elementary school teacher.
This year’s winner of the A.V. Huff History Scholars Award is Furman student Pender Raymond ’27, from Richmond, Virginia. A history and vocal performance double major, she will continue her work with Distinguished University Public Historian and Scholar Courtney Tollison Hartness ’99 on exhibits commemorating Furman’s bicentennial. When Raymond graduates she plans to pursue a career in public history.
The Kate Huff History Scholars award goes to area teachers to support class history projects or field trips. This year’s recipients are Sarah Brower ’22 M’23 of Spartanburg, South Carolina and Tyler Lininger ’21 M’22, of Simpsonville, South Carolina.
A fourth grade teacher at Fairforest Elementary in Spartanburg, Brower will use the grant to take her students on a field trip to examine Revolutionary War battles in the Upstate of South Carolina, where they can discover the hardships of life during wartime.
Lininger is a social studies teacher at Hillcrest High in Simpsonville and will use the grant to purchase resources to support his classes.