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  • Contributors

Victoria E. Bynum is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of History, Texas State University, San Marcos. She is author of The Long Shadow of the Civil War: Southern Dissent and Its Legacies (The University of North Carolina Press, 2010), The Free State of Jones: Mississippi’s Longest Civil War (The University of North Carolina Press, 2001), and Unruly Women: The Politics of Social and Sexual Control in the Old South (The University of North Carolina Press, 1992).

Joan E. Cashin is the guest editor of this month’s issue of Ohio Valley History, and a professor of history at The Ohio State University. She received her doctorate at Harvard University, and she has published four books and numerous articles on nineteenth-century America.

Carl C. Creason is a graduate student in the Department of History at the University of Louisville. His research interests focus on loyalty to the Union in Civil War Kentucky.

Robert Michael Morrissey teaches history at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where he specializes in the history of early America and the Atlantic world, borderlands, ethnohistory, and environmental history. He has just completed his first book, Empire by Collaboration: Indians, Colonists, and Governments in Colonial Illinois Country (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015) which explores the French colonists and Native peoples of the Mississippi Valley and Great Lakes in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Margaret Storey is an Associate Professor in the History Department of DePaul University. She is the author of Loyalty and Loss: Alabama’s Unionists in the Civil War and Reconstruction (2004) and editor of the Civil War memoir of Captain Thomas J. Cypert, Tried Men and True, Or Union Men in Dixie (2011). She is currently working on studies of hard war ideology among the Union female elite. [End Page 2]

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