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  • Contributors

Kristen M. Fleming is a doctoral candidate in history at the University of Cincinnati. Her dissertation is an ecological history of the Ohio River, from the early nineteenth century to World War II. Her other work focuses on topics such as the Army Corps of Engineers' projects and the creation of the Ohio River Valley Sanitation Commission. She was a recipient of a Filson Research Fellowship in 2016.

Nathaniel Lucy is a PhD candidate in musicology & ethnomusicology at the University of Kentucky. His dissertation topic is class identity in the country music community of Branson, Missouri.

Alyssa McClanahan received her PhD in history from the University of Cincinnati in 2016. She is a Cincinnati-based historian who conducts historic research for local developers, homeowners, businesses, and non-profits and serves as a historic preservation tax credit consultant. A co-founder of Kunst Development, a Cincinnati real estate development company, she works with her team at Kunst to renovate historic buildings.

Angela Shope Stiefbold is a graduate of the master's program in regional planning at UNC-Chapel Hill and is a PhD candidate in history at the University of Cincinnati. Her dissertation focuses on farmers' influence on suburban planning in agriculture and rural character preservation efforts in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

David Stradling is the Zane L. Miller Professor of urban history at the University of Cincinnati, where he has taught for twenty years. He is the author of several books, including Where the River Burns: Carl Stokes and the Struggle to Save Cleveland (Cornell University Press, 2015) and In Service to the City: A History of the University of Cincinnati (University of Cincinnati Press, 2018). [End Page 2]

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