Notes on Contributors
Alan Beyerchen
Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara, taught modern German history at The Ohio State University until his retirement (2012). Known for his work on science and technology around World War ii, on the theories of Carl von Clausewitz, and on German plays.
Robert H. Clemm
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2012), is an associate professor at Grove City College. Teaches African, imperial, and military history. Significant contributor to the Encyclopedia of African and Colonial Conflicts and held fellowships from the Mellon and the Bradley Foundations.
Edward Coss
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2005), is a Professor of Military History in the Army Command and General Staff College’s Department of Military History, and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Known for his book All for the King’s Shilling and several other works on European military history.
Sebastian Cox, obe
M.A., King’s College London (1979), has been the Head of the Air Historical Branch (raf) since 1996. Member of the Board of Trustees of the Society for Military History, where he befriended Dr. Guilmartin, and of the Royal Air Force Museum’s Research Board.
Daniel P.M. Curzon
Ph.D. candidate, The Ohio State University, is working on a dissertation entitled Pacific Triumvirate, concerning the relations among Great Britain, Japan, and the United States of America.
Sarah K. Douglas
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2015), is a Lecturer at osu, teaching a range of military history courses from the middle ages to Vietnam. Her first book, Partus Pestilentiae, is currently being reviewed for publication.
Robert S. Ehlers, Jr.
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2005), is the Senior Mentor for the Information Environment Advanced Analysis Course administered by the Department
Andrew de la Garza
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2010), is currently at the University of Louisiana, Lafayette. Teaching covers Asian, world, and military history. His monograph, The Mughal Empire at War, expands the complexity of the military revolutions debate to South Asia.
John F. Guilmartin, Jr.
Ph.D., Princeton University (1975), was a Professor of Military History at osu. He is best known for his work on naval warfare in the Mediterranean during 15th and 16th centuries, including Gunpowder and Galleys and Galleons and Galleys. Also contributed greatly to the fields of airpower history and the history of technology and warfare.
Matthew M. Hurley
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2009), is a Senior Non-Resident Fellow with the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies in Arlington, VA. His recent publication, “Beyond the Iron Triad: The Future of Airborne C2ISR, was published by the Mitchell Institute in 2017.
Peter R. Mansoor
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (1995), is the General Raymond E. Mason, Jr., Chair of Military History at osu. He has produced several monographs on the effectiveness of soldiers and leaders from World War ii to the current war in Iraq.
Edward B. McCaul, Jr.
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2005), is a retired Army lieutenant colonel. He has served in a variety of academic and public positions and has published works on military technology and the American Civil War.
Michael Pavelec
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2004), is a Professor of Airpower History at the Air Force Air Command and Staff College. He has published several works on air power and air technology covering the 20th Century.
William Roberts
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (1999), specializes in U.S. Civil War naval history. A retired U.S. Navy commander, he has published three books and
Robyn Rodriguez
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2011), is an historian working for the Defense pow/mia Accounting Agency. Her research and publications have centered around Sino-German military interaction during the Interwar Period.
Clifford J. Rogers
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (1994), is a Professor of History at the United States Military Academy and the Editor of The Journal of Medieval Military History. Best known for his monographs War Cruel and Sharp and The Military Revolution Debate.
William Waddell
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2014), is an Assistant Professor of Strategy at the Air Force Air War College. His first book, In the Year of the Tiger: the War for Cochinchina, 1945–1951, is slated for publication in 2018.
Corbin Williamson
Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2015), is an Assistant Professor of Strategy at the Air Force Air War College. Published a pair of works on Anglo-American naval cooperation at the beginning of World War ii and anticipates a related monograph.