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  • Contributors

John Ellis is an Assistant Professor of History at Bemidji State University, where he supervises the Social Studies Education program and teaches courses covering eighteenth and nineteenth century America. He specializes in the history of Revolutionary America and the Early American Republic with a particular emphasis in the history of American religion. He has published articles in several academic journals, including Fides et Historia, The Historian, and The Journal of Ecclesiastical History.

C. Walker Gollar is Professor of Church History at Xavier University in Cincinnati, where he has taught for the past twenty-five years. A descendant of the first Catholics who came to Maryland in the seventeenth century, Dr. Gollar earned his Ph.D. in historical theology from the University of St. Michael’s College in Toronto, and is the author of numerous articles and a prize-winning book, American and Catholic: Stories of People Who Built the Church (Franciscan Media, 2015). He has twice been honored with the Teacher of the Year award at Xavier.

Evan Elizabeth Hart is an Assistant Professor of History at Missouri Western State University. She is a historian of the twentieth century United States who specializes in the history of women’s activism, particularly among women of color. She is currently working on a project examining coalition building between women of color in the Women’s Health Movement.

Sara E. Lampert is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of South Dakota. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Michigan, and her book, Wild to See Her: Female Celebrity and the Transformation of American Theater and Culture, 1790–1850, is forthcoming from the University of Illinois Press. She has published on female platform performance in the mid-nineteenth century and on the career of African American singer Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield.

Pedro A. Regalado is a Ph.D. Candidate in American Studies at Yale University and a recipient of the Jefferson Scholars Foundation National Fellowship. His research focuses on the intersection of race, immigration, capitalism, and the built environment. The working title of his dissertation is “Where Angels Fear to Tread: Latina/os, Work, and the Making of New York.”

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