• Home
  • About
    • Mission & Staff
    • Submissions
    • Teacher’s Guide
    • Advertising
    • Contact
  • Books
    • JAR Annual Volumes
    • JAR Book Series
    • JAR Book Awards
    • The 100 Best American Revolution Books of All Time
  • Podcast
  • Write
    • Join Our Team
    • Doc Set-Up Guidelines
    • JAR Style Guide
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • News
  • Archives
Journal of the American Revolution - allthingsliberty.com
  • People
  • Politics
    • Prewar (<1775)
    • War Years (1775-1783)
    • Postwar (>1783)
  • Culture
    • Arts & Literature
    • Food & Lifestyle
    • Religion
  • Economics
  • Conflict & War
    • Prewar (<1775)
    • War Years (1775-1783)
    • Techniques & Tech
  • Critical Thinking
  • Plus
    • Teacher’s Guide
    • Reviews
    • Primary Sources
    • Places
    • Interviews
    • Beyond the Classroom
Bryan Rindfleisch

Bryan Rindfleisch

Bryan Rindfleisch is an Assistant Professor at Marquette University, where he teaches courses in Colonial American and Native American history. Originally trained at the University of Wisconsin – Eau Claire where he specialized in American Indian Studies and U.S. history, Rindfleisch recently completed his Ph.D. at the University of Oklahoma, receiving his doctorate in December 2014. His dissertation focuses on the intersection of colonial, Native, imperial, and Atlantic histories, peoples, and places in eighteenth-century North America. He has written a number of articles, which have been published in the journals of Ethnohistory, History Compass, Graduate History Review, Wisconsin Magazine of History, among others.

2
Conflict & War, Espionage and Cryptography, Loyalists, Patriots, People June 27, 2019 June 26, 2019

David Holmes, Timothy Barnard, and Questionable Loyalties

With the Revolutionary War in full swing by August 1776, George Galphin penned a letter to his nephew, Timothy Barnard. Galphin started his letter…

Read More
12
People February 3, 2016 August 28, 2016

The Stockbridge-Mohican Community, 1775-1783

On July 4, 1776, the authors of American independence declared to the world “that all men are created equal, [and] that they are endowed…

Read More
12
People September 1, 2015 August 28, 2016

George Galphin and the War in the South, 1775-1780

At the same time that George Washington and the Continental army besieged Thomas Gage and his forces at Boston in November 1775, Britain’s Superintendent…

Read More

 

Support Our Sponsors

About The Journal

Journal of the American Revolution

Journal of the American Revolution is the leading source of knowledge about the American Revolution and Founding Era. We feature smart, groundbreaking research and well-written narratives from expert writers. Our work has been featured by the New York Times, TIME magazine, History Channel, Discovery Channel, Smithsonian, Mental Floss, NPR, and more. Journal of the American Revolution also produces annual hardcover volumes, a branded book series, and the podcast, Dispatches.

    Latest Posts

    Economics

    This Week on Dispatches: Scott M. Smith on Luke Day, Forgotten Leader of Shays’s Rebellion

    Arts & Literature

    An Interview with Bob Thompson, author of Revolutionary Roads

    Constitutional Debate

    The Purpose of the Electoral College: A Seemingly Endless Controversy

    Recent Comments

    • Editors on The Purpose of the Electoral College: A Seemingly Endless Controversy
    • John Fraser on The Purpose of the Electoral College: A Seemingly Endless Controversy
    • Jonathan Moreland on The Purpose of the Electoral College: A Seemingly Endless Controversy
    • Gene Procknow on The Great New York Fire of 1776
    • Gary Shattuck on The Great New York Fire of 1776
    • Kim Burdick on The Great New York Fire of 1776
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION © 2018
    Back to top