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Heather Cox Richardson (born October 8, 1962) is an American historian. She is a professor of history at Boston College , where she teaches courses on the American Civil War , the Reconstruction Era , the American West, and the Plains Indians .
One of the best-known historians today is the Maine-based scholar Heather Cox Richardson. I’m a big fan. Richardson lives in Round Pond (Lincoln County) Maine. She is the professor of history at ...
William J. Richardson, SJ, philosopher and psychoanalyst; known for his work on Martin Heidegger John Sallis , philosopher within Continental philosophy and hermeneutics Jacques Taminiaux
[19] [20] Major writers on Substack include historian Heather Cox Richardson, tech journalists Casey Newton [21] and Eric Newcomer, [22] journalist Matthew Yglesias, [23] economists Glenn Loury and Emily Oster, linguist John McWhorter, journalists Matt Taibbi and Bari Weiss, [24] and authors Daniel M. Lavery, George Saunders, Blake Nelson ...
Heather Cox Richardson is co-host of an NPR podcast, she has 235k followers on Twitter, and an email newsletter with (I think) more than 350k subscribers. nytimes.com described her as 'more or less by accident the most successful independent journalist in America'.
Heather Cox (née Schoeny) (born June 3, 1970) is an American sportscaster who is a sports reporter for NBC. As Heather Schoeny, she played college volleyball at University of the Pacific . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Heather Cox Richardson praised the book in The Chicago Tribune, calling it "one of those rare books that delivers a great deal more than it promises"; though critical of what she saw as some factual errors and "unsubstantiated claims" by Applegate, such as Lyman Beecher's role in creating mass media, Richardson concluded that these flaws "do ...
According to historian Heather Cox Richardson, Conkling was "undoubtedly personally affronted." [7] The Stalwart leader voiced opposition towards Garfield's appointment of Robertson by arguing that presidents were expected to obtain the agreement of senators from the states they sought to give positions to, though Richardson asserted: [7]