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  • Contributor

Ann Clymer Bigelow is a retired editor of the Current Digest of the Soviet Press. She is the author of many articles published in Ohio Valley History, including work on Ohio's antebellum African American barbers, Dr. William Awl and the establishment of the Ohio Lunatic Asylum, Dr. Benjamin Rush and his impact on the practice of medicine in the Ohio Valley, and most recently, a study of insanity in Ohio during the Civil War.

David J. Endres, a priest of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, is academic dean and associate professor of church history and historical theology at Mount St. Mary's Seminary/The Athenaeum of Ohio. The author of numerous articles, he has recently published his second monograph, Many Tongues, One Faith: A History of Franciscan Parish Life in the United States. He is currently editor of U.S. Catholic Historian and is preparing a history of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati for its bicentennial in 2021.

Natalie Inman is associate professor of history at Cumberland University.

Carl E. Kramer is co-owner and vice president of Kramer Associates Inc., a public history firm in Jeffersonville, Indiana, and retired adjunct assistant professor of history and former director of the Institute for Local and Oral History at Indiana University Southeast. He has published extensively on urban development in the Louisville metropolitan region and is the author of This Place We Call Home: A History of Clark County, Indiana (Indiana University Press, 2007).

Stephen Rockenbach is professor of history and chair of the Department of History and Philosophy at Virginia State University. His book, War Upon Our Border: Two Ohio Valley Communities Navigate the Civil War (University of Virginia Press, 2016), explores the war's effect on Corydon, Indiana and Frankfort, Kentucky.

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