Hilary N. Green (Author)
Hilary N. Green is the James B. Duke Professor of Africana Studies at Davidson College. A distinguished scholar, her research explores the intersections of race, memory, and education in the post–Civil War American South. She is the author of Educational Reconstruction: African American Schools in the Urban South, 1865–1890, co-author of the NPS-OAH Historic Resource Study of African American Schools in the South, 1865–1900, and co-editor of The Civil War and the Summer of 2020 (Fordham).
Edda L. Fields-Black (Foreword By)
Edda L. Fields-Black is a Professor in the Department of History and Director of the Dietrich College Humanities Center at Carnegie Mellon University. Her latest book, COMBEE: Harriet Tubman, the Combahee River Raid, and Black Freedom during the Civil War (2024) uses US Civil War Pension Files to tell the story of the Combahee River Raid, when in June 1863 Harriet Tubman, her ring of spies, scouts, and pilots piloted Colonel James Montgomery, the 2nd SC Volunteers, and one battery of the 3rd Rhode Island Heavy Artillery up the Combahee River to raid seven rice plantations and bring liberation to 756 enslaved people, through the words and using the voices of the Combahee freedom seekers who self-liberated in the raid. One of Fields-Black's many specialties is identifying new sources and methods to recover the voices of historical actors (particularly peasant rice farmers in early and pre-colonial West Africa's Upper Guinea Coast and Blacks forced to labor on rice plantations in the antebellum South Carolina and Georgia Lowcountry) who did not author their own written sources.