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  • Contributors

Kenneth W. Noe is the Draughon Professor in Southern History at Auburn University. He has co-edited with Shannon H. Wilson, The Civil War in Appalachia: Collected Essays (1997) and written Southwest Virginia’s Railroad: Modernization and the Sectional Crisis (1994) and Perryville: This Grand Havoc of Battle (2001).

Ethan S. Rafuse is assistant professor of history at the United States Military Academy at West Point. He received his Ph.D from the University of Missouri-Kansas City and is the author of A Single Grand Victory: The First Campaign and Battle of Manassas (2002).

Thomas P. Lowry, M.D., is the author of seven books, among them The Stories the Soldiers Wouldn’t Tell: Sex in the Civil War (1994); Tarnished Eagles: The Courts-Martial of Fifty Union Colonels and Lieutenant Colonels (1998); Don’t Shoot that Boy! Abraham Lincoln and Military Justice (1999); and Tarnished Scalpels: The Courts-Martial of Fifty Union Surgeons (2000).

Michael C. C. Adams is Regents Professor of History and director of the Military History Program at Northern Kentucky University. In addition to more than one hundred articles and book reviews, he has written four books. The first, Our Masters the Rebels: A Speculation on Union Military Failure in the East, 1861–1865, was published in 1978 and won the Jefferson Davis Book Prize of the Museum of the Confederacy. It has been republished as Fighting for Defeat (1992). His latest book is Echoes of War: A Thousand Years of Military History in Popular Culture (2002).

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