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215 Contributors Charles Beatty-Medina is associate professor of history at the University of toledo. His areas of specialization include the history of native and African peoples of the early Atlantic world and colonial Latin America. He holds a Phd in history from Brown University. James Buss is associate professor and chair of the department of History at oklahoma City University. He is the author of Winning the West with Words: Language and Conquest in the Lower Great Lakes (2011). His research explores the intersections of language, race, and memory in the history of the Great Lakes. William M. Cremin is professor emeritus of anthropology at Western Michigan University. He was instrumental in establishing Western Michigan University’s annual archaeological field program and has spent much of his career conducting research on the oneota-related Berrien phase of southwest Michigan. Cremin spent three seasons with Michael nassaney and the field school excavating the site of Fort st. Joseph. Daniel Ingram is assistant professor of history at Ball state University. He is the author of Indians and British Outposts in Eighteenth-Century America (2012) and is working currently on a study of George rogers Clark in historical memory. LisaMarie Malischke earned her M A in anthropology and a graduate certificate in ethnohistory in 2009 from Western Michigan University. she is currently a doctoral student at the University of Alabama where she is researching colonial French and native interactions in French Louisiana and the Lower Mississippi Valley. Dawn Marsh is assistant professor at Purdue University specializing in native American and indigenous history. she earned her Phd from the University of California , riverside. Her book-length manuscript centers on the experiences of a Lenape woman who continued to live in William Penn’s “peaceable kingdom” long after her people were dispossessed of their homelands in Pennsylvania. 216| Contributors Sarah E. Miller is assistant professor of history at the University of south Carolina at salkehatchie. Her research interests include native Americans and the early American republic. she has published several articles about ohio indians and is currently studying native Americans of the southeastern United states. Michael S. Nassaney is professor of anthropology at Western Michigan University and principal investigator of the Fort st. Joseph Archaeological Project, an interdisciplinary program in community service learning that examines the history and archaeology of the fur trade and colonialism in the st. Joseph river Valley. Greg O’Brien is associate professor at the University of north Carolina at Greensboro . His research interests include the American indians of the southeast and American environmental history. His publications include Pre-Removal Choctaw History: Exploring New Paths (2008) and The Timeline of Native Americans: The Ultimate Guide to North America’s Indigenous Peoples (2008). Melissa Rinehart is visiting assistant professor of anthropology at Miami University at Middletown. she earned her Phd in cultural anthropology with a focus on native American studies at Michigan state University. she has published on the Miami removal, Miami language shift and revitalization efforts, and native American representation and resistance at the Chicago World’s Fair. Amy C. Schutt is assistant professor of history at the state University of new York College at Cortland. in addition to native American history, her research interests include the history of children and youth in early America. she is the author of Peoples of the River Valleys: The Odyssey of the Delaware Indians (2007). schutt holds a Phd in history from indiana University. ...

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