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  • Contributors

Cicero M. Fain III is an Associate Professor of History at the College of Southern Maryland. His current project, Black Huntington: An Appalachian Story is under contract with the University of Illinois Press.

Andrew Mach is a doctoral student in U.S. history at the University of Notre Dame specializing in nineteenth and early twentieth-century religion and culture. His current research focuses on Civil War memory and Catholicism in the Progressive Era.

Nathan McGee is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of History at the University of Cincinnati. His dissertation examines the connections between Appalachian migration and the development and growth of bluegrass music communities in American cities.

Tangi Villerbu is an Associate Professor of History at the Université de La Rochelle (France). He has published widely on Western History and U.S. Catholic History, including Les missions du Minnesota. Catholicisme et colonisation dans l’Ouest américain, 1830–1860 (2014); Bande dessinée western. Histoire d’un genre (2015); and Une Amérique française, 1760–1860: Dynamiques du corridor créole, co-edited with Guillaume Teasdale (2015). His current work focuses on French networks in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys from the Revolution to the Civil War. [End Page 2]

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