James Kirby Martin is the Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen University Professor of History at the University of Houston. Among his many books are Benedict Arnold, Revolutionary Hero: An American Warrior Reconsidered; A Respectable Army: The Military Origins of the Republic, 1763–1789, with Mark Edward Lender; and Forgotten Allies: The Oneida Indians and the American Revolution, with Joseph T. Glatthaar.
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David L. Preston is the Westvaco Professor of National Security Studies at The Citadel. He is the author of Braddock’s Defeat: The Battle of the Monongahela and the Road to Revolution, winner of the 2015 Guggenheim-Lehrman Prize in Military History, and The Texture of Contact: European and Indian Settler Communities on the Frontiers of Iroquoia, 1667-1783.
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Mark Edward Lender is Emeritus Professor of History at Kean University, New Jersey. He has written widely on early American military and social history. He is the author of the War for American Independence and co-author of the award-winning Citizen Soldier: The Revolutionary War Journal of Joseph Bloomfield, and Fatal Sunday: George Washington, the Monmouth Campaign, and the Politics of Battle, nominated for the 2017 George Washington Book Prize.
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Edward G. Lengel is Chief Historian of the White House Historical Association. He is the author of Inventing George Washington: America’s Founder, in Myth and Memory and General George Washington: A Military Life, finalist for the George Washington Book Prize. As Editor-in-Chief of the Papers of George Washington project at the University of Virginia, he was awarded the National Humanities Medal.
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Charles Neimeyer is the Director and Chief of Marine Corps History at Marine Corps University, Quantico, Virginia. He has taught at the United States Naval Academy, the University of Maryland, and Georgetown University and is the author of America Goes to War: A Social History of the Continental Army, 1775–1783.
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Jim Piecuch is Professor of History at Kennesaw State University. He is the author of The Battle of Camden: A Documentary History, Three Peoples, One King: Loyalists, Indians, and Slaves in the Revolutionary South, and edited Cavalry in the American Revolution.
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