James G. Lewis is the Staff Historian at the Forest History Society, in Durham, NC. He is the author of The Forest Service and the Greatest Good: A Centennial History (2005); and Lands Worth Saving: The Weeks Act of 1911, the National Forests and the Enduring Value of Public Investment (2018). He has served as editor of the Society’s magazine Forest History Today since 2006.
Char Miller is the W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History at Pomona College. His most recent books include Burn Scars: A Documentary History of Fire Suppression, From Colonial Origins to the Resurgence of Cultural Burning (2024), Natural Consequences: Intimate Essays for a Planet in Peril (2022), and West Side Rising: How San Antonio’s 1921 Flood Devastated a City and Sparked a Latino Environmental Justice Movement (2021).
Mark S. Ashton is the Morris K. Jesup Professor of Silviculture and Forest Ecology, the Senior Associate Dean of The Forest School, and the Director of the Yale Forests at the Yale School of the Environment. He has conducted over thirty-five years of research on the biological and physical processes governing the dynamics of natural forests and on the creation of their agroforestry analogs.
Rachel D. Kline is a public historian of women, the environment, and public lands. She is the author of numerous scholarly articles, public history reports, and community histories, and the book We Feminine Foresters: Women and the USDA Forest Service (2025). Kline is the 2024 recipient of the National Archives Foundation Cokie Roberts Fellowship.