The University of Southern Mississippi



JOSHUA S. HAYNES28 October 2019University of Southern Mississippi118 College Drive #5407Hattiesburg, MS 39406601-266-5374EDUCATION2013Ph.D., History, and Graduate Certificate in Native American StudiesUniversity of Georgia2001M.A., Southern Studies University of Mississippi1998B.A., HistoryTulane UniversityPROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS2016-present University of Southern Mississippi, Assistant Professor of History;Affiliate Faculty, American Indian Studies Minor; Program Coordinator, Southern Studies Concentration2015-2016McKendree University, Division of Social Science, Assistant Professor 2014-2015Miami University, Department of History, Visiting Assistant Professor 2011-2014University of Georgia, Department of History, Instructor of Record2013-2014Athens Technical College, Instructor 2004-2005National Trust for Historic Preservation, State and Local Partnerships Program Assistant 2001-2004Alabama Historical Commission, Special Events and Community Relations CoordinatorPUBLICATIONS Books2018Patrolling the Border: Theft and Violence on the Creek-Georgia Frontier, 1770-1796, Early American Places Series (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2018). Refereed Journal Articles2010“Constructing Authenticity: The Indian Arts and Crafts Board and the Eastern Band of Cherokees, 1935-1985,” Native South vol. 3 (2010): 1-38. Edited Volumes2020“Border Captives: Prisoners of War on the Creek-Georgia Border, 1770-1800,” in From Colonial Encounters to the Iraq War: Prisoners of War and their Place in American History, edited by Lorien Foote and Daniel Krebs, Modern War Studies Series (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas), forthcoming.Book Reviews2016Review of George Edward Milne. Natchez Country: Indians, Colonies, and the Landscapes of Race in French Louisiana. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2015. Agricultural History, Vol. 90 No. 3 (Summer 2016).2015Review of Sami Lakom?ki. Gathering Together: The Shawnee People through Diaspora and Nationhood, 1600–1870. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014. Journal of American History, Vol. 102 No. 2 (September 2015).2014Review of Keith Widder. Beyond Pontiac’s Shadow: Michilimackinac and the Anglo-Indian War of 1763. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 2013. Michigan Historical Review, Vol. 40 No. 2 (Fall 2014).AWARDS, HONORS, GRANTS, and FELLOWSHIPS2019Interdisciplinary Investigations Grant, University of Southern Mississippi School of Interdisciplinary Studies and Professional Development 2017Aubrey Keith Lucas and Ella Ginn Lucas Endowment Award for Faculty Excellence, University of Southern Mississippi2013Student Government Association Outstanding Professor Award, University of Georgia 2012American Philosophical Society Phillips Fund for Native American Research Grant2012Graduate School Summer Doctoral Research Fellowship, University of Georgia2012Thomas Pleasant Vincent, Sr., History Scholarship, University of Georgia2012Gregory Graduate Research Award, University of GeorgiaINVITED TALKS2019Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, North Adams, Massachusetts“Patrolling the Border: Theft and Violence on the Creek-Georgia Frontier, 1770-1796”2019University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi“Patrolling the Border: Theft and Violence on the Creek-Georgia Frontier, 1770-1796”2012Trail of Tears Association, Georgia Chapter, Dahlonega, Georgia“An Uncommon Degree of Ferocity: Patterns of Violence on the Creek-Georgia Frontier, 1783-1790”CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS 2019 American Society for Ethnohistory Conference, State College, Pennsylvania“War, Diplomacy, and Placemaking: The Creek-Choctaw War and the Gulf South Borderlands” 2019Society for Military History Annual Meeting, Columbus, Ohio“‘You Must Desire Them to Let Us Alone’: Soldiers, Civilians, and Refugees in the Cauldron of the Creek-Choctaw War, 1765-1777” (panel organizer)2019Organization of American Historians Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania“‘Bloody Amusements:’ The Creek-Choctaw War and Indigenous Autonomy in the Colonial Gulf South”2018 Gulf South History and Humanities Conference, Baton Rouge, Louisiana“‘The Creeks Come and Take Away Our Scalps with Impunity’: The Creek-Choctaw War and Indigenous Expansion in the Colonial Gulf South”2018St. George Tucker Society Annual Meeting, Jackson, Mississippi“Patrolling the Border: Theft and Violence on the Creek-Georgia Frontier, 1770-1796”2017American Society for Ethnohistory Conference, Winnipeg, Manitoba“‘The Nation Now Present, Old and Young’: Forging Creek National Consensus, 1790-1796”2017Gulf South History and Humanities Conference, Pensacola, Florida“‘To Secure Our Own Territorial Rights’: Border Patrols as a Unifying Force in Creek Politics”2017Society for Military History Conference, Jacksonville, Florida“Avoiding War on the Border, Avoiding War at Home: Creek Indians, Georgians, and the Oconee War, 1783-1790” 2016American Society for Ethnohistory Conference, Nashville, Tennessee“‘The whole Nation in common:’ Creek Land Ownership and Nationhood, 1770-1773”2011Southern Historical Association Annual Meeting“An Uncommon Degree of Ferocity: Patterns of Violence on the Creek-Georgia Frontier, 1783-1790”2008Native American and Indigenous Studies Meeting, Athens, Georgia“The Indian Arts and Crafts Board, the Eastern Band of Cherokees, and the Construction of Authenticity from 1935-1987”2007American Society for Ethnohistory Conference, Tulsa, Oklahoma“The Indian Arts and Crafts Board, the Eastern Band of Cherokees, and the Construction of Authenticity from 1935-1987”2001Southern Anthropological Society Annual Meeting, Nashville, Tennessee“Identity Construction and the Cherokee Tribe of Northeast Alabama” MEDIA APPEARANCES2017WDAM TV, Columbus Day segment, Hattiesburg, Mississippi2013Consultant, Who Do You Think You Are? on TLC, episode debuted 10 September 2013Appeared in the cable television show assisting a celebrity with research. See episode recap at , DEPARTMENTAL, and COMMUNITY TALKS2019Phi Alpha Theta, University of Southern Mississippi Chapter, guest speaker“Keeping Order by Crossing Lines: The Creek-Choctaw War and Communicative Violence in the Gulf South Borderlands, 1763-1777”2019Jamestowne Society, Natchez Trace Company, guest lecture“The Anglo-Powhatan Wars”2018Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, University of Southern Mississippi, guest lecture“Patrolling the Creek Indian Borderlands: From West Florida to Georgia”2018Dale Center for the Study of War and Society Richard McCarthy Lecture Series, University of Southern Mississippi“Patrolling the Border: Theft and Violence on the Creek-Georgia Frontier, 1770-1796”2017Phi Alpha Theta, University of Southern Mississippi Chapter, guest speaker“‘An Uncommon Degree of Ferocity’”: Creek Border Patrols and Colonialism”2017 Guest Lecturer, AST 301, American Indian Studies: Contemporary Issues in Indian Country, University of Southern MississippiTEACHING EXPERIENCEUniversity of Southern MississippiWorld Civilizations since 1500 (Spring 2017, Spring 2018-ONLINE, Fall 2018 full term, Fall 2018 8W2, Winter 2019, Spring 2019-ONLINE, Spring 2020-ONLINE)U.S. History to 1877 (Fall 2016, Spring 2017, Fall 2017, Fall 2019)American Indian History to 1840 (Fall 2016, Fall 2019)The Native South to 1865 (Summer 2016)Footsteps of the Ancestors: Interdisciplinary Inquiry into American Indian History and Culture in the Gulf South Borderlands (Spring 2020)The American Revolution (Fall 2017)History Theory and Methods Seminar (Fall 2019) Honors College Junior Research Seminar (Fall 2018, Spring 2019, Fall 2019, Spring 2020)Graduate Seminar: Ethnohistory (Fall 2017)Graduate Seminar: Public History (Spring 2018, Spring 2020)Graduate Seminar: Vast Early America (Fall 2018)McKendree UniversityU.S. History to 1877 (Fall 2015, Spring 2016)American Indian History to 1840 (Spring 2016)Race in American History (Fall 2015)American Economic History, 1607 to the Present (Spring 2016)Miami UniversityU.S. History to 1877 (Fall 2014, Spring 2015)American Indian History to 1840 (Fall 2014)American Indian History since 1840 (Spring 2015)Senior Research Seminar: War and Captivity in Native American Societies (Spring 2015)Athens Technical CollegeU.S. History since 1877 (Fall 2013, Spring 2014)University of GeorgiaU.S. History to 1877 (Summer 2010, Fall 2011, Fall 2012, Spring 2013, Fall 2013, Spring 2014)American Indian History to 1840 (Summer 2011, Fall 2011, Spring 2012, Spring 2013, Summer 2013, Fall 2013, Spring 2014, Summer 2014)American Indian History since 1840 (Fall 2013)The Native South to 1865 (Spring 2012, Fall 2012)GRADUATE STUDENT SUPERVISIONMajor ProfessorJacob Featherling (M.A., History, 2019)Jamie Henton (M.A., History, 2019)Committee MemberJustin Greer (Ph.D., English, in progress) Eugene Branstiter (Ph.D., History, in progress)DEPARTMENTAL and UNIVERSITY SERVICEHonors College Faculty Fellow (2018-2020)USM University Academic Council (2019-2020)National History Day Planning Committee (2019-2020)USM Undergraduate Research Symposium Planning Committee (2019-2020)USM School of the Humanities Online Teaching and Learning Committee (2019-2020)Dale Center for the Study of War and Society Community Roundtable Organizer (2019-2020)USM Center for Human Rights and Civil Liberties, Board Member (2019-2020)Association of College and University Educators Effective Teaching Practices Course (2019-20)USM School of the Humanities/History Program Modern Europe Search Committee (2018-19)Center for the Study of the Gulf South Spring Lecture Organizer (2019)American Indian Studies Program Committee (2018-2020)Southern Studies Concentration Coordinator (2018-2020)School of the Humanities History Program Library Liaison (2018-2020)School of the Humanities Undergraduate Recruitment Committee (2018-2020)School of the Humanities/History Program G2C-QEP Committee (2018-2020)Dale Center for the Study of War and Society Richard McCarthy Lecture Series organizer (2018)Dale Center for the Study of War and Society Community Roundtable participant (2018-2019)Dale Center for the Study of War and Society Fellow (2016-present)Center for the Study of the Gulf South Fellow (2016-present)Undergraduate Symposium on Research and Creative Activity judge (2017-2019)National History Day judge (2017-2019)Black and Gold Day Student Recruitment Event (2016-2019)History Department Recruitment Committee (2016-2018)School of the Humanities/History Department Awards Committee (2016-2020)School of the Humanities/History Department Graduate Professionalism Committee (2016-2020) History Department Undergraduate Committee (2016-2019)School of the Humanities/History Department Undergraduate Advising (2016-2020)PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPSAmerican Society for EthnohistoryOmohundro Institute of Early American History and CultureOrganization of American HistoriansSociety for Military HistoryREFERENCESClaudio Saunt, Richard B. Russell Professor in American History; Associate Director, Institute of Native American Studies; Co-Director, Center for Virtual HistoryLeConte Hall, Department of HistoryUniversity of GeorgiaAthens, GA 30602 csaunt@uga.edu, 706-542-2053Robbie Ethridge, Professor of Anthropology510 Lamar HallDepartment of Sociology and AnthropologyUniversity of MississippiUniversity, MS 38677rethridg@olemiss.edu, 662-915-7317Matthew Casey, Associate Professor and Director of the School of the Humanities118 College Drive #5047School of the HumanitiesUniversity of Southern MississippiHattiesburg, MS 39406Matthew.casey@usm.edu, 601-266-4320Kyle F. Zelner, Associate Professor, Director of Graduate Studies, former History Department Chair118 College Drive #5047Department of HistoryUniversity of Southern MississippiHattiesburg, MS 39406kyle.zelner@usm.edu, 601-266-6196Jace Weaver, Professor and Director, Institute of Native American Studies Peabody HallDepartment of ReligionUniversity of GeorgiaAthens, GA 30602 jweaver@uga.edu, 706-542-1492 ................
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