Jay H. Buckley (PhD, Nebraska), an Associate Professor of History and Director of the Charles Redd Center for Western History at Brigham Young University. Buckley is author of the award-winning _William Clark: Indian Diplomat_ (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2008). He also wrote _A Golden Jubilee History: The Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at BYU, 1972-2022_ (Provo, UT: Charles Redd Center, 2022). Other peer-reviewed, co-authored books include: _By His Own Hand?: The Mysterious Death of Meriwether Lewis_ (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2006); _Zebulon Pike, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West_ (Univ. of Oklahoma Press, 2012); _Great Plains Forts_ (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2023); _The Life and Adventures of Mr. Eli Wiggill: South African 1820 Settler, Wesleyan Missionary, and Latter-day Saint_ (Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2024). Co-authored books in public history, local history, pedagogical history, and historical reference include: _Orem_ [Utah] (Arcadia Publishing [Images of America], 2010); _Historical Dictionary of the American Frontier_ (Rowman & Littlefield/Scarecrow Press, 2015); _Explorers of the American West: Mapping the World through Primary Documents_ (ABC-CLIO, 2016); _Explorers of the American East: Mapping the World through Primary Documents_ (ABC-CLIO, 2018). Buckley served as President of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation (2011-12), which provides national leadership on scholarship, education, and conservation pertaining to the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail. His teaching and research specialties include the fur trade, Lewis & Clark, exploration & migration, Indian-white relations, the South African frontier, and other western themes. Current and Future Book Projects: Sheep Ranching in Utah and the Intermountain West; A Fur Trade History of the Great Plains and Canadian Prairies; The Real Butch Cassidy: A Case of Identity Theft; Comparative Frontiers: America and South Africa in the Nineteenth Century.
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