About

AT A GLANCE:
Ambrose-Hesseltine Professor of U.S. Military History, University of Wisconsin-Madison
RESEARCH AREAS:
 Irregular warfare
 Colonial and postcolonial conflict
 U.S. defense policy
 Civil-military relations
BIOGRAPHY:
John W. Hall is the Ambrose-Hesseltine Chair in U.S. Military History at the University
               of Wisconsin-Madison, where he is also co-founder and co-chair of the War in Society
               and Culture Program.  He is the author of Uncommon Defense: Indian Allies in the Black
               Hawk War (Harvard, 2009) and numerous essays on early American warfare. He is a past
               president of the Society for Military History and a retired U.S. Army Reserve colonel,
               with past assignments as a historian to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, U.S.
               European Command, U.S. Central Command, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff.  He is a graduate
               of the U.S. Military Academy and the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College and
               holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
PUBLICATIONS:
Uncommon Defense: Indian Allies in the Black Hawk War. Harvard University Press, 2009.
To Starve an Army: How Great Power Armies Respond to Austerity. In Sustainable Security:
               Rethinking American National Security Strategy, edited by Jeremi Suri and Benjamin
               A. Valentino, 166-195. New York: Oxford University Press, 2016.
An Irregular Reconsideration of George Washington and the American Military Tradition,
               Journal of Military History 78, no. 3 (July 2014): 961-993.
My Favorite Officer: George Washingtons Apprentice, Nathanael Greene, in Sons
               of the Father: George Washington and His Prot矇g矇s, ed. Robert McDonald, 149-168 (Charlottesville:
               University of Virginia Press, 2013).
A Reckless Waste of Blood and Treasure: The Last Campaign of the Second Seminole
               War, in Between War and Peace: How America Ends Its Wars, ed. Matthew Moten (New
               York: Free Press, 2011).
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