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Brynne Long

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Dr. Brynne Long

Dr. Brynne Long

  • Instructor
  • Early America, Military History

email:
susanlong@unomaha.edu
office:
  • ASH 287P

Additional Information

Dr. Susan Brynne Long is an instructor of history whose research and teaching focus on early America and military history. Her current research is about the American administration of British allied prisoners of war in the Revolution. She is interested in how prisoner management offers a window into the contested development of federalism in revolutionary America.

She is in the process of revising her dissertation into a book, tentatively titled The Disagreeable Situation: American Prisoner Administration in the Revolutionary War. She is co-author of forthcoming monograph, The Frontier War, 1775–1783, which will be published by the Center of Military History in winter 2026. She has taught at numerous institutions, including the University of Delaware and the University of the Cumberlands. Her scholarly writings have appeared in the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History and Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. A prolific public historian, her op-eds connecting early America with modern domestic and foreign policy issues have appeared in the Washington Post and Real Clear Defense. Dr. Long has spoken for audiences on topics related to the American founding for the American Revolution Institute at the Society of the Cincinnati, the George Washington Masonic National Memorial, the Society of the First Families of New York, and more.

Additional Information

Dr. Susan Brynne Long is an instructor of history whose research and teaching focus on early America and military history. Her current research is about the American administration of British allied prisoners of war in the Revolution. She is interested in how prisoner management offers a window into the contested development of federalism in revolutionary America.

She is in the process of revising her dissertation into a book, tentatively titled The Disagreeable Situation: American Prisoner Administration in the Revolutionary War. She is co-author of forthcoming monograph, The Frontier War, 1775–1783, which will be published by the Center of Military History in winter 2026. She has taught at numerous institutions, including the University of Delaware and the University of the Cumberlands. Her scholarly writings have appeared in the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History and Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. A prolific public historian, her op-eds connecting early America with modern domestic and foreign policy issues have appeared in the Washington Post and Real Clear Defense. Dr. Long has spoken for audiences on topics related to the American founding for the American Revolution Institute at the Society of the Cincinnati, the George Washington Masonic National Memorial, the Society of the First Families of New York, and more.

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