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Joseph McLean Hall Jr. is a professor, writer, and historian at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine where he specializes in early modern American and Atlantic history, particularly focusing on Native American, European, and environmental interactions in North America. He is a nationally recognized historian for his research in Native American history and in addition to his work in academia, he often writes articles that contribute to newspapers and gives presentations to public audiences. At Bates, Hall is currently the chair of the Environmental Studies program and is an associate professor in the history department. Hall also received 2009 Kroepsch Award for Excellence in Teaching and the honor of delivering the 2018 Convocation Address at Bates.

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  • Joseph McLean Hall Jr. is a professor, writer, and historian at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine where he specializes in early modern American and Atlantic history, particularly focusing on Native American, European, and environmental interactions in North America. He is a nationally recognized historian for his research in Native American history and in addition to his work in academia, he often writes articles that contribute to newspapers and gives presentations to public audiences. At Bates, Hall is currently the chair of the Environmental Studies program and is an associate professor in the history department. Hall also received 2009 Kroepsch Award for Excellence in Teaching and the honor of delivering the 2018 Convocation Address at Bates. Hall is originally from Newport, Rhode Island and received his B.A. at Amherst College (1991) and his M.A. (1995) and Ph.D. (2001) at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He is the author of many articles, essays, and popular books including Zamumo’s Gifts: Indian-European Exchange in the Colonial Southeast (2012) and Making an Indian People: Creek Formation in the Colonial Southeast, 1590-1735 (2001). His works have been positively reviewed and cited in peer reviewed historical journals such as The Journal of Southern History, The Florida Historical Quarterly, The William and Mary Quarterly, and Maine History. Hall teaches a diversity of history courses at Bates that are cross-listed in the Africana, American Studies, and/or Environmental Studies programs. Current Courses * African Slavery in the Americas * Historical Methods * Native American History * New England: Environment and History * Origins of New Nations, 1500-1820 * The Age of the American Revolution, 1763-1800 * The Revolutionary Black Atlantic, 1770-1840 * This Land is Whose Land? * U.S. Environmental History * Wabanaki History in Maine (en)
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  • Joseph McLean Hall Jr. is a professor, writer, and historian at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine where he specializes in early modern American and Atlantic history, particularly focusing on Native American, European, and environmental interactions in North America. He is a nationally recognized historian for his research in Native American history and in addition to his work in academia, he often writes articles that contribute to newspapers and gives presentations to public audiences. At Bates, Hall is currently the chair of the Environmental Studies program and is an associate professor in the history department. Hall also received 2009 Kroepsch Award for Excellence in Teaching and the honor of delivering the 2018 Convocation Address at Bates. (en)
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  • Joseph M. Hall Jr. (en)
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