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191 contributors John R. Lundberg received his PhD from Texas Christian University in 2007. He is the author of The Finishing Stroke: Texans in the 1864 Tennessee Campaign and is currently working on a history of Granbury’s Texas Brigade and a study of Unionism during the secession crisis in Texas. Alexander Mendoza received his PhD from Texas Tech University in 2001 and is currently an assistant professor of history at the University of Texas at Tyler. He is the author of Confederate Struggle for Command: General James Longstreet and the First Corps in the West (2008). David Powell attended the Virginia Military Institute, graduating in 1983 with a BA in history. His work has appeared in the Gettysburg Magazine and in North and South magazine. He has focused his research on the Battle of Chickamauga, has led numerous tours to the battlefield, and has written an atlas of the battle, titled The Maps of Chickamauga (2009). Ethan S. Rafuse received his PhD at the University of Missouri–Kansas City and is an associate professor of military history at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth. He has published over two hundred articles, essays, and reviews, and is the author, editor, or coeditor of seven books, including McClellan’s War: The Failure of Moderation in the Struggle for the Union (2005) and Robert E. Lee and the Fall of the Confederacy, 1863–1865 (2008). William G. Robertson received his PhD from the University of Virginia in 1975. He is the author of Back Door to Richmond: The Bermuda Campaign , April–June 1864 and The Petersburg Campaign: The Battle of Old Men and Young Boys, June 9, 1864, as well as numerous articles and book chapters on American Civil War subjects. He is currently the director of the Combat Studies Institute and a Command Historian, U.S. Army Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Timothy B. Smith received his PhD from Mississippi State University in 2001. He is a veteran of the National Park Service at the Shiloh National Military Park and now teaches history at the University of Tennessee at Martin. Among his books are This Great Battlefield of Shiloh: History, Memory, and the Establishment of a Civil War National Military Park (2004), The Untold Story of Shiloh: The Battle and the Battlefield (2006), and The Golden Age of Battlefield Preservation: The Establishment of :RRGZRUWK&RQWULEVLQGG $0 contributors 192 America’s First Five Civil War Military Parks (2008). He is currently working on a history of Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park and a study of the Civil War home front in Mississippi. Lee White works as a historian and a park ranger at the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park. He graduated from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga with a BA in history in 1996. He is currently researching the actions of the Army of Tennessee between the fall of Atlanta and the beginning of the 1864 Tennessee Campaign. He is the editor of Great Things Are Expected of Us: The Letters of Colonel C. Irvine Walker (2009). Steven E. Woodworth received his PhD from Rice University in 1987 and is a professor of history at Texas Christian University. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of twenty-six books; a two-time winner of the Fletcher Pratt Award of the New York Civil War Round Table (for Jefferson Davis and His Generals [1990] and Davis and Lee at War [1995]); a two-time finalist for the Peter Seaborg Award of the George Tyler Moore Center for the Study of the Civil War (for While God Is Marching On [2001] and Nothing but Victory [2005]); and a winner of the Grady McWhiney Award of the Dallas Civil War Round Table for lifetime contribution to the study of Civil War history. :RRGZRUWK&RQWULEVLQGG $0 ...

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