Cicero M. Fain III is an author, editor, and fourth-generation Black Huntingtonian. A recipient of the Carter G. Woodson Fellowship from Marshall University, Fain has authored several articles in peer-reviewed journals, including "Buffalo Soldier, Deserter, Criminal: The Remarkably Complicated Life of Charles Ringo." His first book, Black Huntington: An Appalachian Story, was a finalist for the Appalachian Studies Association Weatherford Award and won the West Virginia Library Association’s Literary Merit Award. Sheena Harris Hayes is an editor, researcher, and associate professor of African American history at Auburn University. Her article, "A Woman’s Work: The Story of Cornelia Bowen and Mt. Meigs, Alabama," won the Griot Golden Pen Award for best article by the Griot scholarly journal. Hayes is also a contributor to several peer-reviewed volumes, such as Alabama Women: Their Lives and Times, which received the Alabama Historical Association’s James F. Sulzby Award for excellence in scholarship on Alabaman history. Hayes’s works also include Margaret Murray Washington: The Life and Times of a Career Clubwoman and editorial contributions for "The Black Soldiers in the War and Society" series at the University of Virginia. Wilburn Hayden Jr. is professor emeritus and senior scholar at York University, Toronto. Hayden served as the first African American president of the Appalachian Studies Association and has been active in social work academic leadership for more than four decades. He is the author of Appalachian Black People: Identity, Location and Racial Barriers. William H. Turner is a sociologist who was born in the heart of the Appalachian coalfields in Harlan County, Kentucky. He is the author of The Harlan Renaissance: Stories of Black Life in Appalachian Coal Towns, which earned a Weatherford Award in Nonfiction and a Kentucky Historical Society Governor’s Award. Turner is also the coeditor of Blacks in Appalachia and a guest editor for a special issue of Blacks in Appalachia, published by Berea College’s American Heritage, a magazine of Southern Appalachian Life & Culture. Ronald D Eller is former director of the Appalachian Center and professor of history at the University of Kentucky. He is the author of Miners, Millhands, and Mountaineers: Industrialization of the Appalachian South, 1880–1930.