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Continue reading →: Episode 188: John Lingan
A native of Maryland, John Lingan’s first book is Homeplace: A Southern Town, a Country Legend, and the Last Days of Mountain-Top Honky Tonk, which examines the northern Virginia town of Winchester. Winchester is known largely for two things: the Civil War and being the birthplace of Patsy Cline. But…
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Continue reading →: American Rambler Podcast 187: James MacDonald
Once again, Colin plays “Six Degrees of Court Carney,” this time with fellow LSU veteran and historian James MacDonald. As is the case with Colin, James is a Damn Yankee who moved to the South as an adult and has never looked back. Oh, and like Colin, he married a…
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Continue reading →: Podcast 185: Wayne Edmondson
Wayne Edmondson is a high school teacher living in northern Louisiana. He and Colin are old friends and survivors of the LSU grad program in history. Colin stayed to finish his dissertation, but Wayne took a different path. In addition to studying at LSU, he’s played in a rock band,…
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Continue reading →: Podcast 184: Tim van den Hoff
It’s fitting that Colin and Tim talked on the anniversary of the deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. That’s because Tim’s recent documentary Monumental Crossroads (link below) examines the debate over Confederate memorials and the meaning of the Civil War in the South. Taking his camera to locations…
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Continue reading →: Podcast 183: John Jay Osborn, Jr.
John Jay Osborn, Jr., is perhaps best known for his 1971 novel The Paper Chase, which was made into an Oscar-winning movie starring John Houseman (with whom John became friends). The book was based on John’s experiences at Harvard Law School and centers on James T. Hart, a bright, ambitious,…
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Continue reading →: Podcast 182: Chris Leahy
Chris Leahy was a fellow traveler with Colin in his days at LSU. Since 2007, he’s been a professor a Keuka College in upstate New York. He has a new book out, President without a Party: A Life of John Tyler (LSU Press, 2020). His biography began as a dissertation…
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Continue reading →: Podcast 181: Barclay Key
Barclay Key is a history professor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. He’s a native of north Alabama, who was born into a working class family of farmers and textile workers. His father picked cotton before going to college and becoming a teacher. Barclay’s Alabama roots help explain…
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Continue reading →: Podcast 180: Robert Gudmestad
Robert Gudmestad is a native of Minnesota who teaches history at Colorado State University in Fort Collins. He knows Colin from his days as a grad student at LSU, where they both worked with the imposing figure of Charles Royster, the late scholar of the Early Republic, the Civil War,…
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Continue reading →: American Rambler Podcast 179: Mark Doyle
Mark Doyle is a professor of history at Middle Tennessee State University. A native of Oklahoma who now resides in Nashville, he has lived for extended periods in New Orleans, Boston, and Ireland. His latest book is The Kinks: Songs of the Semi-Detached. Mark and Colin talk about the historical…
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Continue reading →: American Rambler Podcast 178: Manisha Sinha
Manisha Sinha was born in India, but she moved to the U.S. to finish her education. Since graduating with a Ph.D. from Columbia–where she studied under Eric Foner–she has made an impact on the history world. Her first book, The Counterrevolution of Slavery (2000), based on her dissertation, was nominated…
