Claire Robertson is Professor of African and Caribbean History at The Ohio State University. Her latest book is Genital Cutting and Transnational Sisterhood: Disputing U.S. Polemics (University of ...
Mark McKibbin works as an author and political consultant in California and is completing a biography of James Wilson. Denver Brunsman is chair of the Department of History at George Washington ...
Wesley Millett and Gerald White are the authors of The Rebel and the Rose. In April 1865, the Civil War ended for most Americans. The war, and its various aspects, continues to capture the ...
Mr. Flynn is the executive director of Accuracy in Academia and author of the newly released, :Why the Left Hates America: Exposing the Lies That Have Obscured Our Nation’s Greatness." Who is ...
On the history of literature masquerading as primary source.
Dr. Whealey is author of Hitler and Spain: The Nazi Role in the Spanish Civil War 1936-1939 (Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky, 1989). Most historians do not know that the ...
Mr. Leonard is a freelance journalist and regular contributor to HNN. For more information please visit his website at www.aaronleonard.net James Bradley author of “Flags of Our Fathers” and ...
Mr. Honoroff is an HNN intern. This article seeks to provide a brief account of the facts surrounding Dilling’s background, so that we might find historical clarity amidst the obscurity that ...
Mr. Dallek is the author of Flawed Giant: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1961-1973, which is available in paperback. What makes a great president? Washington, Lincoln, and Franklin Roosevelt are ...
Thomas Doherty is Professor of American Studies at Brandeis University. He specializes in the history of film. His latest book is Hollywood's Censor: Joseph I. Breen and the Production Code ...
Laura Mogulescu is Curator of Women's History Collections for the Center for Women's History at the New-York Historical Society. The N-YHS's exhibition "Title IX: Activism On and Off the Field ...
Is the Ambrose story bigger than it appeared at first? Initially, Ambrose's chief offense seemed to be that he had simply forgotten to put quotation marks around a few select sentences. Now ...