Gregory Knouff

Professor
Phone: (603) 358-2961 ext. 2961
Office: Morrison Hall, Keene, NH 03431

Gregory Knouff received his B.A. from Temple University and Ph.D. from Rutgers University. Dr. Knouff's area of expertise is colonial and Revolutionary North America, with an emphasis on race, gender, and national identity. He teaches courses on early North America, including American Revolution, the Loyalist Experience, Gender in Early North America, Native North American History, and Africans in the Atlantic World, among others. He also teaches courses on early and modern U.S. military history. He is the author of The Soldiers鈥 Revolution: Pennsylvanians in Arms and the Forging of Early American Identity (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2004, paper 2012) and several articles, including most recently: 鈥淪eductive Sedition: New Hampshire Loyalists鈥 Experiences and Memories of the American Revolutionary Wars鈥 in War, Demobilization, and Memory: The Legacy of War in the Age of Transatlantic Revolutions. Edited by Alan Forrest, Karen Hagemann, and Michael Rowe (Palgrave-MacMillan, 2016) and 鈥溾橳hat Abundant Infamous Roach鈥: Breed and Ruth Batcheller, Moderate Loyalism, Language, and Domestic Power in Revolutionary New Hampshire鈥 in Joseph Moore and Rebecca Brannon, eds., Loyalty & Revolution: Essays in Honor of Robert M. Calhoon (University of South Carolina Press, 2019). These essays are drawn from Prof. Knouff's current book manuscript, 鈥淭he Enemy Within: Loyalists, Language, Gender, and Power, Revolutionary New Hampshire.鈥