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Winter, 2008
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CONTRIBUTORS


GREG GORDON is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Montana and is writing a biography of A.B. Hammond. His previous books include Landscapes of Desire: Nature and Identity in Utah's Canyon Country (Utah State University Press, 2003) and Gringos in the Mist: A Naturalist's Journey Through Ecuador (Laughing Coyote Press, 2003).

 
RICHARD S. CHRISTEN is an associate professor of education at the University of Portland. He earned his M.A. in History from the University of Montana and Ph.D. in Social and Cultural Foundations of Education from the University of Minnesota. His publications include articles on graffiti as an educator of urban teenagers in Educational Foundations (2003), Lloyd Reynolds and the origins of Italic handwriting in Oregon schools in American Educational History Journal (2001), and seventeenth-century English writing masters in History of Education Quarterly (1999).

 
H. LLOYD KEITH, who died in November of this year, was a member of the Centre for Rupert's Land Studies and Professor Emeritus in sociology and history at Shoreline Community College, Seattle, Washington. He was the author of North of Athabasca: Slave Lake and Mackenzie River Documents of the North West Company, 1800–1821 (2001) and was at work on a documentary history of the North West Company's affairs on the Columbia River, 1807–1821.

 
GREGORY PAYNTER SHINE, a sixteen-year veteran of the National Park Service, is the chief ranger and historian at Fort Vancouver National Historic Site and Vancouver National Historic Reserve, and historian for the Northwest Cultural Resources Institute. He is also an adjunct faculty member in the History Department at Portland State University, where he instructs graduate students in the public history field school. Shine earned his B.A. from Wabash College and his M.A. in U.S. history from San Francisco State University.  


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