Project Team

General Editors

Adam CrymbleAdam Crymble is a PhD History candidate at King’s College London and the webmaster of the Network in Canadian History & Environment (NiCHE). He blogs at Thoughts on Public & Digital History and can be found on Twitter at @Adam_Crymble.

fred gibbsFred Gibbs is an Assistant Professor of History at George Mason University and the Director of Digital Scholarship at the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History & New Media. His personal blog can be found at historyproef.

Sara PalmerSara Palmer is a recent fellow of the Lewis H. Beck Center for Electronic Collections at Emory University. Sara can be found on Twitter as @sarepal.

Miriam Posner is a digital humanities program coordinator at the University of California, Los Angeles. She blogs at Miriam Posner and can be found on Twitter as @miriamkp.

Technical Editors

Jeremy Boggs is the Design Architect for Digital Research Scholarship at the University of Virginia Library. Jeremy can be found at ClioWeb and on Twitter as @clioweb.

William J. TurkelWilliam J. Turkel is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Western Ontario and director of the Network in Canadian History & Environment (NiCHE) Digital Infrastructure. His website is http://williamjturkel.net and he can be found on Twitter as @williamjturkel.

Editors at Large

Alan MacEachernAlan MacEachern is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Western Ontario and the Director of the Network in Canadian History & Environment (NiCHE).

Ian Milligan is an Assistant Professor of Canadian History at the University of Waterloo and Co-Editor of Active History.

Community Participants

The Programming Historian 2 also benefits enormously from the efforts of people who volunteer their time and energy. If you are interested in pitching in, either for a single project or in an ongoing role, please contact us.

Institutional Support

The Programming Historian 2 is grateful to the Network in Canadian History & Environment (NiCHE), ScholarsLab at the University of Virginia, The Center for Digital Humanities at UCLA, as well as to the Roy Rozensweig Centre for History & New Media (CHNM) for providing us with a publishing platform and a boost of enthusiasm.