John P. McKay (Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley) is professor emeritus at the University of Illinois. He has written or edited numerous works, including the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize–winning book Pioneers for Profit: Foreign Entrepreneurship and Russian Industrialization, 1885–1913.
Bennett D. Hill (Ph.D., Princeton), late of Georgetown University, published Church and State in the Middle Ages and numerous articles and reviews, and was one of the contributing editors to The Encyclopedia of World History. He taught for many years at the University of Illinois and was a Benedictine monk of St. Anselm’s Abbey in Washington, D.C.
John Buckler (Ph.D., Harvard University), late of the University of Illinois, published numerous works, including Theban Hegemony, 371–362 B.C.; Philip II and the Sacred War; and Aegean Greece in the Fourth Century B.C. With Hans Beck, he published Central Greece and the Politics of Power in the Fourth Century.
Clare Haru Crowston (Ph.D., Cornell University) teaches at the University of Illinois, where she is currently associate professor of history. She is the author of Credit, Fashion, Sex: Economies of Regard in Old Regime France and Fabricating Women: The Seamstresses of Old Regime France, 1675–1791, which won the Berkshire and Hagley Prizes. She edited two special issues of the Journal of Women’s History, has published numerous journal articles and reviews, and is a past president of the Society for French Historical Studies.
Merrye E. Wiesner-Hanks (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin–Madison) taught first at Augustana College in Illinois, and since 1985 at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, where she is currently UWM Distinguished Professor in the department of history. She is the Senior Editor of the Sixteenth Century Journal, one of the editors of the Journal of Global History, and the author or editor of more than twenty books, including The Marvelous Hairy Girls: The Gonzales Sisters and Their Worlds and Gender in History (2nd ed.). She is the former Chief Reader for Advanced Placement World History.
Joe Perry (Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) is associate professor of modern German and European history at Georgia State University. He has published numerous articles and is author of Christmas in Germany: A Cultural History. His current research interests focus on issues of consumption, gender, and popular culture in West Germany and Western Europe after World War II.