Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture 20th annual conference “The Consequences of War” Halifax, Nova Scotia Thursday, June 12, 2014 All opening night events will be held at the Lord Nelson Hotel. 3:00–5:00 P.M. Walking tour of Halifax conducted by Elizabeth Mancke (reservations required). Please meet in the lobby of the Lord Nelson Hotel. 4:30–6:00 Registration opens outside the Imperial Ballroom, Lord Nelson Hotel 6:00–7:00 Welcome Address and Mi’kmaq Opening Ceremony Imperial Ballroom, Lord Nelson Hotel 7:00–8:30 Keynote Address, Imperial Ballroom, Lord Nelson Hotel The Wages of Peace in the Construction of Empire in the Eighteenth Century Jack P. Greene, Johns Hopkins University Friday, June 13, 2014 All Sessions will be held in the Sobey Building, Saint Mary’s University. 8:00 A.M. Registration and book exhibits open. 8:00–8:30 Coffee, fruit, and breakfast pastries will be available in the conference Hall, Loyola Building OIEAHC ◊ page 1 PANELS BEGIN AT 8:30 AND END AT 10:15. SESSION 1: WAR, CAPTIVITY AND SLAVERY IN THE SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY ENGLISH ATLANTIC Sobey 160 Chair: Padraig Riley, Dalhousie University Redemption and Retribution: Captivity, Sea-Raiding, and Slavery in the Anglo-Spanish Caribbean, 1670–1689 John Coakley, University of Wisconsin, Madison Taming the “miserable drove”: Religion, Sovereignty, and Servitude on the Eve of the Pequot War, 1629–1637 Eric Otremba, Macalester College “The necessity for destroying these Carib Indians.” Indigenous Genocide and The Royal African Company: Stuart policy in the Lesser Antilles, 1660–1685 Demetri Debe, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Comment: Lorena Walsh SESSION 2: LOYALIST IDENTITY FORMATION AND ORDER IN THE CRUCIBLE OF REBELLION AND WAR Sobey 260 Chair: Catherine Cottreau-Robins, Nova Scotia Museum Standing Foremost against the Congress: The Origins of Loyalism in New York, c. 1765–1775 Christopher Minty, University of Stirling Loyalist Soldiers: Men-in-Motion in the Modern British Atlantic Liam Riordan, University of Maine at Orono The King’s Wayfarers at Country Harbour, Nova Scotia Carole Troxler, Elon University Comment: Jane Errington, Queen’s University SESSION 3: AMERICA’S OTHER SOLDIERS: AFRICAN AMERICANS, CHILDREN, AND WOMEN IN THE WAR OF INDEPENDENCE Sobey 265 Chair: Andrew J. O’Shaughnessy, University of Virginia Memories of Childhood: Boy Soldiers of the American Revolution Remember War and Work Caroline Cox, University of the Pacific Women of Honor: Feminine Evolution through Dedication to the American Revolution Craig Bruce Smith, Brandeis University Claiming their Due: African American Soldiers and the Quest for Equality in the Early Republic Judith Van Buskirk, SUNY, Cortland Comment: Denver Brunsman, George Washington University OIEAHC ◊ page 2 SESSION 4: STRATEGIC VIOLENCE AND NATIVE STRUGGLES FOR CONTROL Sobey 255 Chair: Ned Landsman, Stony Brook University “Desolating the country,” the Forgotten Raid on Ayubale, 1704–1706 Alejandra Dubcovsky, Yale University “we hear of…Fields water’d with their Blood”: Publishing Terror in Early New England Katherine Grandjean, Wellesley College Comment: Cynthia Van Zandt, University of New Hampshire 10:15–10:45 Refreshment Break at Conference Hall, Loyola Building PANELS RESUME AT 10:45 AND END AT 12:30. SESSION 5: HUMANITARIANISM AND WAR: PRISONERS OF WAR, WELFARE, AND MILITARY MEDICINE, 1756– 1815 Sobey 260 Chair: Paul Kopperman, Oregon State University The Language and Practices of Care: American POWs in Halifax, 1812–15 James Alsop, McMaster University Prisoners of War, Public Opinion, and Humanitarianism in the Wars of the Mid Eighteenth Century Erica Charters, University of Oxford Humanity as a tool of professional self-fashioning in British military medicine, 1775–1815 Wendy Churchill, University of New Brunswick Comment: Wayne E. Lee, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill SESSION 6: CONDUCTING TRADE AMIDST CHAOS: MARITIME COMMERCE AND ANGLO-AMERICAN LAW FROM THE WARS FOR EMPIRE TO THE WAR OF 1812 Sobey 160 Chair: Gautham Rao, American University “A Boisterous Season on the Atlantic”: American Marine Insurers in the Age of Revolution Hannah Farber, University of California, Berkeley Alexander Hamilton and “the Consequences of War”: Exploring the Impact of Neutrality on Marine Insurance Law and American Federalism Kate Brown, University of Virginia Transferring Allegiance: Prize Courts and Claims of Belonging in the mid-Eighteenth Century Mitch Fraas, University of Pennsylvania Comment: Gautham Rao, American University OIEAHC ◊ page 3 SESSION 7: INDIAN SLAVERY IN THE AMERICAS Sobey 255 Chair: Alan Gallay, Texas Christian University Indian Slavery in Caribana: A Wild Coast and a Lost Region Carolyn Arena, Columbia University A Convenient Trade: The Enslavement of Indians in Early New England Wendy Warren, Princeton University Indian and African Slavery: Separate and Unequal? Linford Fisher, Brown University Comment: Alan Gallay, Texas Christian University SESSION 8: ALTERED LIVES AND PRIVATE WARS Sobey 265 Chair: Michael Vance, Saint Mary’s University The “consequences of war” in the journals of British Royal Engineer William Booth, 1779–1800 Bonnie Huskins, St. Thomas University A Portrait of a Lawyer as a Young Man: The Diary of Richard Cranch Norton and the War of 1812 Nathan Kozuskanich, Nipissing University “This cruel separation”: War, Family, and the Transformation of Identity in the Life of Eliza Pinckney Megan Hatfield, University of Miami Comment: Len Travers, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth 12:30–2:15 Lunch and optional guided walk around Pleasant Point from Elizabeth Mancke (A list of recommended restaurants is available online at http://oieahc.wm.edu/conferences/20thannual/Friday_Lunch.pdf and will be included in your conference packet.) PANELS RESUME AT 2:15 AND END AT 4:00. SESSION 9: RETHINKING SLAVE RESISTANCE AND REBELLION IN THE BRITISH ATLANTIC WORLD Sobey 255 Chair: Jason Sharples, The Catholic University of America Resistance and Rebellion in Jamaica, 1674–1784 Trevor Burnard, University of Melbourne “Nothing in View But Freedom”: Runaway Slaves and the Quest for Liberty in Early America Billy Smith, Montana State University Reimagining Runaways: Stealing Away and the Withdrawal of Labor Simon Newman, University of Glasgow OIEAHC ◊ page 4 Comment: Anne Twitty, University of Mississippi and Jason Sharples, The Catholic University of America SESSION 10: THE INFLUENCE OF NATIVE AMERICAN SEAFARERS ON HISTORY Sobey 260 Chair: Daniel K. Richter, University of Pennsylvania “We are the Lords of Navigation and they not so”: The Clash of Maritime Cultures and the Battle for New England and Acadia’s Littoral, 1600–1763 Kelly Chaves, University of New Brunswick Pirating Empire: People of the Dawn in the Age of Sail Matthew Bahar, Oberlin College “Preserved on the Mighty Waters”: Mapping the Indian Mariners Project Jason Mancini, Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center Comment: Andrew Lipman, Syracuse University SESSION 11: WAR, ATLANTIC CIRCUITS, AND A SEARCH FOR STABILITY Sobey 265 Chair: Adam Malka, University at Buffalo Philadelphia Plantations: Nova Scotian Land Schemes and Imagining British America Between the Wars, 1763–1775 Alexandra Montgomery, University of Pennsylvania Recovering Lost (or Stolen) Treasure: Lawyering for Loyalists in the Post-Revolutionary War Period Sally Hadden, Western Michigan University Refugee Loyalism: The Currency of Allegiance in British New York, 1776–1783 Christopher Sparshott, Northwestern University in Qatar Comment: Sheila Skemp, University of Mississippi SESSION 12: PRACTICING AUTHORITY IN THE EARLY MODERN FRENCH ATLANTIC Sobey 160 Chair: Anya Zilberstein, Concordia University, Montreal Cultivating Authority in Seventeenth-Century New France Christopher Parsons, Northeastern University From Trade to Subjecthood: The Changing Nature of the Debate over Authority in the French Atlantic Helen Dewar, McGill University “Le sang m’y conduit” (“blood draws me here”): Colonial Failures, Memory, and Intercultural Bonds in French Guiana (1660s–1680s) Céline Carayon, Salisbury University Comment: Christopher Tomlins, University of California, Irvine OIEAHC ◊ page 5 4:00–4:30 Refreshment Break, Foyer of the McNally Theatre THE PLENARY SESSION BEGINS AT 4:30. PLENARY SESSION: THE CONSEQUENCES OF WAR AND THE BLACK ATLANTIC McNally Theatre Auditorium Chair: Roderick McDonald, Rider University The British Empire’s “Sable Arm”: Black Combatants in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Caribbean Conflict Maria Bollettino, Framingham State University Slavery in Maritime Canada, and its Black Atlantic Origins: An Understudied Subject, 1760–1820 Afua Cooper, Dalhousie University Laborers, Pioneers, Rangers: British Recruitment of Military (Slave) Labor from the Leeward Islands During the Seven Years’ War in the Caribbean David Barry Gaspar, Duke University War and the Tangled Lines of Migration in the Black Atlantic Gregory O’Malley, University of California, Santa Cruz Comment: The Audience 7:15–8:30 Reception, Georgian Lounge, Lord Nelson Hotel Saturday, June 14, 2014 All Sessions will be held in the McCain Arts & Sciences Building, Dalhousie University. NEW IN 2014 7:45 A.M. Q&A session on how to organize an OIEAHC conference. 20th annual conference organizers Justin Roberts, Elizabeth Mancke and John Reid will share their experiences of organizing a large academic conference. If you would like to propose an OIEAHC conference at your institution, then please join us. Contact Martha Howard at Martha.Howard@wm.edu to reserve a spot. McCain courtyard, weather permitting; McCain 2021 if raining 8:00 A.M. Registration and book exhibits, McCain Lobby and Courtyard 8:00–8:30 Coffee, fruit, and breakfast pastries, McCain Courtyard OIEAHC ◊ page 6 PANELS BEGIN AT 8:30 AND END AT 10:15. SESSION 13: SLAVERY, A SPANISH ATLANTIC WORLD IN UPHEAVAL, AND THE EFFECTS ON THE EARLY UNITED STATES, 1790–1815 Scotiabank Auditorium Chair: Amy Turner Bushnell, Brown University “The Most Respectable Characters Could Not Suppress the Agitation of Their Tempers”: The ShortLived Slave Trade Ban in the Orleans Territory, 1804–1805 Eberhard L. Faber, Loyola University, New Orleans The 1811 New Orleans Slave Revolt and the Spanish Atlantic World Eric Herschthal, Columbia University Revolutionary Consequences: U.S. Traders, Slavery, and the Venezuelan Struggles for Emancipation, 1797–1815 Edward Pompeian, College of William & Mary Comment: Jane Landers, Vanderbilt University SESSION 14: WARFARE AND DISLOCATION IN THE NATIVE AMERICAS McCain 2170 Chair: Jessica Stern, California State University, Fullerton Negotiating Colonialism and Native Authority in the Ohio Country Lori Daggar, University of Pennsylvania The Political and Economic Aftermath of the Cherokee War, 1761–1775 Jessica Wallace, Ohio State University Colonial Warfare and Native American Diaspora: Natchez Refugees among the Chickasaws, Cherokees, Creeks, and English, 1731–1742 Noel Edward Smyth, University of California, Santa Cruz Comment: Michelle LeMaster, Lehigh University SESSION 15: NEW IMPERIAL STRATEGIES FOR EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY IMPERIAL WARS McCain 2021 Chair: Krista Kesselring, Dalhousie University A Different Sort of Biological Warfare: British Bioespionage in Spanish America, 1713–1739 Kathleen Murphy, California Polytechnic State University The Halifax Moment: Planning the Peace in North America and the Caribbean from the Board of Trade, 1748–1754 David Flaherty, University of Virginia OIEAHC ◊ page 7 Rhetoric, Reality and Retaliation: The Problem of Implementing the Law of Nations in the American Revolution Gwenda Morgan, University of Newcastle Comment: Mark Peterson, University of California, Berkeley SESSION 16: PRESS GANGS, PRIZE COURTS AND PRIVATEERS: THE MARITIME NORTHEAST AND THE WAR OF 1812 McCain 2198 Chair: Jerry Bannister, Dalhousie University Halifax and the War of 1812: The Port and the Court Faye Kert Glorious First of June: The Shannon-Chesapeake Celebrations in Halifax Keith Mercer, Saint Mary’s University Hook’s Dilemma: Customs Collectors, Privateers & Fraud on the Maine Frontier, 1812–14 Edward Martin, University of Maine at Orono Comment: Daniel G. Conlin, Maritime Museum of the Atlantic 10:15–10:45 Refreshment Break, McCain Courtyard PANELS RESUME AT 10:45 AND END AT 12:30. SESSION 17: THE NATURE OF AUTHORITY: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AND ARTICULATING VISIONS OF EMPIRE Scotiabank Auditorium Chair: François FurstenbHrg, Johns Hopkins University 1783: The American Revolution and the Partition of North America Eliga Gould, University of New Hampshire John Dickinson and the Barbadians: The Imperial Crisis in Comparative Perspective Craig Yirush, University of California, Los Angeles Democratic Exclusion: State-making in the New Republic Jessica Choppin Roney, Ohio University Comment: Guy Chet, University of North Texas SESSION 18: MISSIONARY MEN AND WOMEN: WHAT QUAKERS, MORAVIANS, AND ANGLICANS CAN TELL US ABOUT TRANSATLANTIC ANTISLAVERY IN AN AGE OF REVOLUTION AND REACTION McCain 2198 Chair: Christopher Brown, Columbia University Lessons of War: Quaker Abolitionist Networks at the Turn-of-the-Nineteenth Century Sarah Crabtree, San Francisco State University OIEAHC ◊ page 8 “Liberty of Conscience,” Moravian Missions, and Slavery: The Case of Christian Ignatius Latrobe (1780s–1816) Jenna M. Gibbs, Florida International University The Afterlife of Thomas Clarkson’s Quaker Trilogy: Abolitionism, Pacifism, and Print Culture in the decade after 1814 Dee E. Andrews, California State University, East Bay Comment: Geoffrey Plank, University of East Anglia SESSION 19: COSTS OF WAR: ECONOMIC, ENVIRONMENTAL, AND SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF MILITARY SERVICE IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION McCain 2021 Chair: Douglas Bradburn, Fred W. Smith National Library, Mt. Vernon The Wages of War: Coerced Military Service and the Loss of Economic Freedom in the American Revolutionary War Christopher Magra, University of Tennessee Planting Veterans on New York’s Borderlands, 1784–1814 Holly Mayer, Duquesne University Lead Ammunition in the Saratoga Battlefields: Legacies of a Militarized Landscape David Hsiung, Juniata College Comment: Ricardo A. Herrera, School of Advanced Military Studies, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College SESSION 20: BEYOND THE MARGINS OF MEMORY: USING THE DOCUMENTARY RECORD TO RECOVER NATIVE HISTORY McCain 2170 Chair: Paul Grant-Costa, Yale University Make a Stand until the Darkness of Night: Editing Native American Military Documents Tobias Glaza, Yale University Recovering the Mohegan Native World Faith Damon Davison, Mohegan Tribal Library Archivist In the Ground and in the Documents: Reconstructing Native American Communities Lucianne Lavin, Institute for American Indian Studies Comment: Paul Grant-Costa, Yale University 12:30–1:30 Lunch (A list of recommended restaurants is available online at http://oieahc.wm.edu/conferences/20thannual/Saturday_Lunch.pdf And will be included in your conference packet.) OIEAHC ◊ page 9 NEW IN 2014 12:30-1:30 Join OI Director Karin Wulf and members of the OIEAHC Council for a discussion of Open Access issues during lunch. Spaces are limited so please contact Martha Howard at Martha.Howard@wm.edu for a reservation. Boxed lunches will be provided to the first 30 participants who sign up for the discussion via our Facebook event so visit us at www.facebook.com/OIEAHC! McCain 2021 PANELS RESUME AT 1:30 AND END AT 3:15. SESSION 21: GEOGRAPHIES OF EMPIRE Scotiabank Auditorium Chair: Bradford J. Wood, Eastern Kentucky University The Cartographic Origins of the British Empire John Crowley, Dalhousie University Mapping the “Whole Coast”: Territory, Cartography, and the Problem of Scale in British America, 1763–1775 S. Max Edelson, University of Virginia Seeing Red: Geography, Maps, and the Québec Act of 1774 Jeffers Lennox, Wesleyan University Comment: Paul Mapp, College of William & Mary SESSION 22: NATIVE ECOLOGIES AND ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES McCain 2198 Chair: Gavin Taylor, Concordia University, Montreal The Power of the Ecotone: The Rise and Fall of the Grand Village of the Kaskaskia Robert Morrissey, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign “At Detroit Everyone Wished to be Master”: Reappraising the Origins of the Fox Wars Richard Weyhing, State University of New York, Oswego “Their filthy trash”: Food, War, and Anglo-Indian Contact in Mary Rowlandson’s Captivity Narrative Rachel Hermann, University of Southampton Comment: Kathryn Labelle, University of Saskatchewan OIEAHC ◊ page 10 SESSION 23: OBJECTS OF MEANING AND COMMUNICATION IN THE EARLY MODERN WORLD McCain 2170 Chair: Ellen Hartigan-O’Connor, University of California, Davis “To Prevent the further growth of this Evil”: Confronting Counterfeits and Regulating Value in Jamaica Katherine Smoak, Johns Hopkins University The Mariner as News Medium in the North Atlantic, 1754–1775 Stephen Hay, University of British Columbia Recovering the Path: Tracking the Origins of Colonial Wampum Belts in the Penn Museum Margaret Bruchac, University of Pennsylvania Comment: Serena Zabin, Carleton College SESSION 24: (RE-)SHAPING POWER ON THE PERIPHERY OF NORTH AMERICAN EMPIRES, 1740–65 McCain 2021 Chair: Turk McCleskey, Virginia Military Institute “The strongest protestations of their friendship, preference, and loyalty to the French”: Exploring Franco-Cherokee Alliance in Trans-Appalachia, 1740–1760 Kristofer Ray, Austin Peay State University British Troops in Charles Town: Living with the Inhabitants of the Southeast Hyun Wu Lee, Texas A&M University Invading Thomas Walker’s Privacy: The Cultural Geography of Martial Space John McCurdy, Eastern Michigan University Comment: Turk McCleskey, Virginia Military Institute 3:15–3:45 Refreshment Break, McCain Courtyard PANELS RESUME AT 3:45 AND END AT 5:30. SESSION 25: THE FRENCH IN THE REVOLUTIONARY ATLANTIC Scotiabank Auditorium Chair: John Reid, Saint Mary’s University “Operating Under Suspicion”: The French Atlantic Commercial Networks of Dutilh & Wachsmuth Michelle McDonald, Richard Stockton College French Abolitionism and Democratic-Republican Politics in the Early American Republic, 1794–1800 Anthony Di Lorenzo, Loyola University, Chicago Roman Catholic Priests and Faithful in and Around Detroit in an Age of Revolutions, 1763–1837 Luca Codignola, University of Genoa Comment: Alexandre Dubé, Washington University in St. Louis OIEAHC ◊ page 11 SESSION 26: AUTHORITY AND THE LEGITIMACY OF VIOLENCE IN EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY AMERICA McCain 2021 Chair: Sarah Fatherly, Queens University of Charlotte Waging Peace in the Seven Years’ War: Colonial Pennsylvania and the Crisis of Imperial Authority in the British Empire Michael Goode, Utah Valley University The Politically Productive Uses of Violence in Revolutionary Pennsylvania Kenneth Owen, University of Illinois, Springfield Coercion and State Formation in the Revolutionary South Thomas Rodgers, Newcastle University Comment: Jonathan Gienapp, University of Mississippi SESSION 27: OTHER MARKETPLACES OF REVOLUTION: MATERIAL CULTURE SHAPED BY THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION McCain 2198 Chair: Kariann Akemi Yokota, University of Colorado, Denver Devils, Cannibals, and the Ghost of General Wolfe: The Visual and Material Culture of the Violent and the Macabre in the American Revolution Zara Anishanslin, City University of New York, College of Staten Island “Curious Monuments of the Infancy of Our Country”: Eighteenth-Century Marketing of Material Culture Commemorating the American Revolution Carl Robert Keyes, Assumption College The Art of “Sophistication”: Determining Authenticity and Value in Counterfeit Goods Catherine Cangany, University of Notre Dame Comment: Benjamin H. Irvin, University of Arizona SESSION 28: RECONSIDERING COLONIAL SCHOOLING: CASE STUDIES IN NATIVE AMERICAN AND INDIGENOUS EDUCATION FROM EASTERN NORTH AMERICA McCain 2170 Chair: Christine DeLucia, Mount Holyoke College Colonial Schooling on Indigenous Land: Day Schools, Colonial Colleges and Indigenous Communities in the Northeast Thomas Peace, Acadia University The Bio-politics of Colonial Education in the Early U.S. Republic Dawn Peterson, Emory University Haudenosaunee Responses to the “Civilization” Policy, Colonial Schooling, and Agricultural Transformation Alyssa Mt. Pleasant, University of Buffalo Comment: Margaret Connell-Szasz, The University of New Mexico OIEAHC ◊ page 12 5:30–6:00 Closing statement and directions to the evening’s activities Scotiabank Auditorium, McCain building 6:45–8:15 Reception in the north casemates of the Halifax Citadel HALIFAX HARBOUR TOUR AND DANCE, TALL SHIP SILVA (TICKETS REQUIRED) The Tall Ship Silva begins boarding at 9:15 p.m. at Queens Wharf, 1751 Lower Water Street. The ship will depart at 9:30 p.m. A beautiful sailboat with a large open deck, the Silva will take us on an evening tour of the harbor. There will be music and dancing and a cash bar. The ship is expected to dock at 11:30. Ticket Price: $35 full price, $30 for Graduate students Sunday, June 15, 2014 8:30 A.M.–3:00 P.M. TOUR OF GRAND-PRÉ NATIONAL HISTORICAL SITE (TICKETS REQUIRED) We will pick up at the three conference accommodation sites and drive an hour from Halifax to Grand-Pré, an Acadian heritage site. Dr. Jonathan Fowler, an archaeologist who has done work at Grand-Pré, will give a guided tour. Lunch will be provided. Ticket Price (including lunch): $50 full price and $40 for Graduate students OIEAHC ◊ page 13 Tweet your conference experience at #OIannual! OIEAHC ◊ page 14 Twentieth Annual Institute Conference: Index of Participants Alsop, James ... Session 5 Crabtree, Sarah ... Session 18 Gould, Eliga ... Session 17 Andrews, Dee E. ... Session 18 Crowley, John ... Session 21 Grandjean, Katherine ... Session 4 Grant-Costa, Paul ... Session 20 Anishanslin, Zara ... Session 27 Arena, Carolyn ... Session 7 Daggar, Lori ... Session 14 Greene, Jack P. ... Keynote Address Davison, Faith Damon ... Session 20 Bahar, Matthew ... Session 10 Debe, Demetri ... Session 1 Hadden, Sally ... Session 11 Bannister, Jerry ... Session 16 DeLucia, Christine ... Session 28 Hartigan-O'Connor, Ellen Session 23 Bollettino, Maria ... Plenary Session Dewar, Helen ... Session 12 Hatfield, Megan ... Session 8 Bradburn, Douglas ... Session 19 Di Lorenzo, Anthony ... Session 2 Hay, Stephen ... Session 23 Brown, Christopher ... Session 18 Dubcovsky, Alejandra ... Session 4 Hermann, Rachel ... Session 22 Brown, Kate ... Session 6 Dubé, Alexandre ... Session 25 Herrera, Ricardo A. ... Session 19 Herschthal, Eric ... Session 13 Bruchac, Margaret ... Session 23 Brunsman, Denver ... Session 3 Edelson, S. Max ... Session 21 Hsiung, David ... Session 19 Burnard, Trevor ... Session 9 Errington, Jane ... Session 2 Huskins, Bonnie ... Session 8 Faber, Eberhard L. ... Session 13 Irvin, Benjamin H. ... Session 27 Bushnell, Amy Turner ... Session 13 Cangany, Catherine ... Session 27 Farber, Hannah ... Session 6 Carayon, Céline ... Session 12 Fatherly, Sarah ... Session 26 Kert, Faye ... Session 16 Charters, Erica ... Session 5 Fisher, Linford ... Session 7 Kesselring, Krista ... Session 15 Chaves, Kelly ... Session 10 Flaherty, David ... Session 15 Keyes, Carl Robert ... Session 27 Chet, Guy ... Session 17 Fraas, Mitch ... Session 6 Kopperman, Paul ... Session 5 Churchill, Wendy ... Session 5 Furstenberg, François ... Session 17 Kozuskanich, Nathan ... Session 8 Codignola, Luca ... Session 25 Gallay, Alan ... Session 7 Labelle, Kathryn ... Session 22 Conlin, Daniel G. ... Session 16 Gaspar, David Barry Plenary Session Landers, Jane ... Session 13 Connell-Szasz, Margaret ... Session 28 Gibbs, Jenna M. ... Session 18 Landsman, Ned ... Session 4 Cooper, Afua ... Plenary Session Gienapp, Jonathan ... Session 26 Lavin, Lucianne ... Session 20 Cottreau-Robins, Catherine Session 2 Glaza, Tobias ... Session 20 Lee, Hyun Wu ... Session 24 Cox, Caroline ... Session 3 Goode, Michael ... Session 26 Lee, Wayne E. ... Session 5 Coakley, John ... Session 1 OIEAHC ◊ page 15 Twentieth Annual Institute Conference: Index of Participants Twitty, Anne ... Session 9 LeMaster, Michelle ... Session 14 Parsons, Christopher ... Session 12 Lennox, Jeffers ... Session 21 Peace, Thomas ... Session 28 Lipman, Andrew ... Session 10 Peterson, Dawn ... Session 28 Van Buskirk, Judith ... Session 3 Peterson, Mark ... Session 15 Van Zandt, Cynthia ... Session 4 Magra, Christopher ... Session 19 Plank, Geoffrey ... Session 18 Vance, Michael ... Session 8 Malka, Adam ... Session 11 Pompeian, Edward ... Session 13 Wallace, Jessica ... Session 14 Mancini, Jason ... Session 10 Mapp, Paul ... Session 21 Rao, Gautham ... Session 6 Walsh, Lorena ... Session 1 Martin, Edward ... Session 16 Ray, Kristofer ... Session 24 Warren, Wendy ... Session 7 Mayer, Holly ... Session 19 Reid, John ... Session 25 Weyhing, Richard ... Session 22 McCleskey, Turk ... Session 24 Richter, Daniel K. ... Session 10 Wood, Bradford J. ... Session 21 McCurdy, John ... Session 24 Riley, Padraig ... Session 1 McDonald, Michelle ... Session 25 Riordan, Liam ... Session 2 Yirush, Craig ... Session 17 McDonald, Roderick Plenary Session Rodgers, Thomas ... Session 26 Yokota, Kariann Akemi ... Session 27 Mercer, Keith ... Session 16 Roney, Jessica Choppin ... Session 17 Zabin, Serena ... Session 23 Minty, Christopher ... Session 2 Montgomery, Alexandra ... Session 11 Sharples, Jason ... Session 9 Morgan, Gwenda ... Session 15 Skemp, Sheila ... Session 11 Morrissey, Robert ... Session 22 Smith, Billy ... Session 9 Mt. Pleasant, Alyssa ... Session 28 Smith, Craig Bruce ... Session 3 Murphy, Kathleen ... Session 15 Smoak, Katherine ... Session 23 Smyth, Noel Edward ... Session 14 Newman, Simon ... Session 9 Sparshott, Christopher ... Session 11 Stern, Jessica ... Session 14 O’Malley, Gregory ... Plenary Session O’Shaughnessy, Andrew J. Session 3 Taylor, Gavin ... Session 22 Otremba, Eric ... Session 1 Tomlins, Christopher ... Session 12 Owen, Kenneth ... Session 26 Travers, Len ... Session 8 Troxler, Carole ... Session 2 OIEAHC ◊ page 16 Zilberstein, Anya ... Session 12