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  • Contributors

Terry A. Barnhart is professor of history at Eastern Illinois University, where he specializes in U.S. social and cultural history, as well as museum studies and historical interpretation.

Larry L. Nelson was site manager at Fort Meigs State Memorial until his retirement from the Ohio Historical Society in 2004. He has authored or edited several books dealing with Ohio's frontier history including A Man of Distinction Among Them: Alexander McKee and the Ohio Frontier (Kent State University Press, 1999), A History of Jonathan Alder: His Captivity and Life with the Indians (University of Akron Press, 2002), and (with David C. Skaggs) The Sixty Years' War for the Great Lakes, 1754-1814 (Michigan State University Press, 2001). He is currently an adjunct professor of history at Bowling Green State University's Firelands College and the editor of Northwest Ohio History.

Alan T. Levenson is the Schusterman/Josey Professor in Jewish History at the University of Oklahoma and previously taught at Siegal College (Cleveland) for eighteen years. He received his BA and MA from Brown University and his PhD from the Ohio State University. He is the author of four books and numerous essays on the modern Jewish experience.

K. Luci Petlack is a doctoral candidate in history at the University of California, Davis, where she studies race relations with an emphasis on black American history. Her dissertation is on the effects of strong military rule on people of color during the American Civil War. She holds a bachelor's degree from University of California, Berkeley.

Jeffrey Ullom is an assistant professor and director of undergraduate theater studies at Case Western Reserve University. His first book, The Human Festival (Southern Illinois University Press, 2008), charts the growth of the nation's leading theater festival, and he is currently writing a contextual history of the Cleveland Play House.

Clarence E. Wunderlin Jr. is professor of history at Kent State University. From 1988 to 2005, he edited The Papers of Robert A. Taft, a four-volume, selected edition funded, in part, by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and published by Kent State University Press. [End Page 3]

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