From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carole W. Troxler

I wish to provide a photo and some additional publications, as well as correct a name spelling. The page is protected. Please help. username CorbettPOE. Thank you

CorbettPOE ( talk) 21:50, 20 February 2024 (UTC) reply

Hi @ CorbettPOE I am not an admin but when you make a request, you need to specific and it should be something that is actionable. Have you uploaded the photo to either Wikipedia or WP:Commons so there is a file name? See WP:Uploading images for more information and be mindful of copyright. Generally, its best to use a photo you took so copyright is clear. What is the misspelling? For future requests you might find the WP:Edit Request Wizard helpful. S0091 ( talk) 22:10, 20 February 2024 (UTC) reply
Hello there CorbettPOE. S0091 provided a good response above, and in the future, I suggest that you try filing an edit request via the wizard that is linked above if you want to make changes to a protected page and need some help formatting a request. The Night Watch (talk) 23:09, 20 February 2024 (UTC) reply


  • What I think should be changed (format using {{ textdiff}}):

"Her sixth book, The Red Dog: A Tale of the Carolina Frontier (Lizzy's Yarn), received the 2017 Historical Book Award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.[1]

  • Why it should be changed: This award is not as notable as the subject's non-fiction books are. Also, she received two other awards from this Society, which while well-established and reputable, is not a professional historians' organization. I suggest the text above be deleted; If an editor wishes to use the marked text, you may wish to replace the paragraph with the following and add the following reference to the one that is there.

Change to "Troxler received three Historical Book Awards from the North Carolina Society of Historians."

  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):

[1] CorbettPOE ( talk) 18:39, 1 March 2024 (UTC) reply

Hi @ CorbettPOE, if you can provide the URL directly when making edit requests, that would be very helpful. I've added these to the article, though not quite as you asked for. Please do make another edit request if there is anything else you'd like to change. I'm looking into the other ones you've added to this page as well. -- asilvering ( talk) 22:11, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply

References

  1. ^ David Hibbard, November 12, 2003, Today at Elon, Elon.edu

Please change Career Section


  • What I think should be changed (format using {{ textdiff}}):

Please change

Career Troxler has written about the Regulator Movement during the American Revolution,[2] Alamance County, Sallie Stockard,[3] Wyatt Outlaw, and Loyalists who fled the lower South for British East Florida after the American Revolution.[4] Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that her book on Sallie Stockyard is a "masterfully crafted biography."[3] Troxler authored a bicentennial history pamphlet for the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources in 1976.[5] In 1977, Troxler was invited to present a paper at the University of Edinburgh during a joint program sponsored by university's School of Scottish Studies and its history department. In March 1988, Troxler was promoted to full professor with Elon College's history department.[6]
+
Career Troxler has written about white Loyalists who fled the Southern Backcountry during the War of the American Revolution and Black Loyalists who joined the British forces in the Southern Theater. Both groups left with the British at the war’s end, and Troxler follows their subsequent lives in the loyal colonies of East Florida, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and the Bahama Islands.[14] She has treated the pre-Revolutionary Regulator Movement, which Alan D. Watson characterized as “the most historiographically exciting and controversial topic in North Carolina's past. Watson found her account of the May 16, 1771 defeat of the Regulators to be “the best account available of the bloodiest confrontation among white English colonials in the eighteenth century. [15] The background of the Regulator upheaval is the context for a book of Young Adult/Adult historical fiction, for which Troxler received a book award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.[16] Her research for Shuttle & Plow: A History of Alamance County, North Carolina (1999) led to later biographies of the African American Reconstruction leader Wyatt Outlaw [17] and the pioneer in women’s higher education Sallie Stockard. Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that Troxler’s treatment of Stockard is a "masterfully crafted biography."[3]
  • Why it should be changed:

Continuity and connections in the subject's research and publication do not appear as originally written. Also, the geographic term "lower South" with respect to the loyalists treated is incorrect, and "Stockard" is misspelled as "Stockyard."

  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):

[1]

— Preceding unsigned comment added by CorbettPOE ( talkcontribs) 19:44, 1 March 2024 (UTC) reply

References

  1. ^ Carole Troxler. The Loyalist Research Network (unb.ca; North Carolina Historical Review 88:425 (October 2011^ Jump up to:a b c Review of Sallie Stockard: Schramm-Pate, Susan (November 2022). Journal of Southern History. 88 (4): 790–792. doi:10.1353/soh.2022.0192. S2CID 253372046.

I have been told here to use the request edit wiki but the page Carole W. Troxler is extended protected

The subject page is extended protected. I followed wiki for edit request and used template, but I do not have the editing privilege. CorbettPOE ( talk) 18:57, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply

Hi @ CorbettPOE I fixed a couple formatting issues with the templates but other than that, you have successfully submitted your request so someone will be along to review it. I am not sure what the normal turn around is but a month would not be surprising given we are all volunteers. In the interim, I will at least fix that typo and see if I find someone willing to review it so maybe it will not take as long. S0091 ( talk) 19:43, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
@ CorbettPOE, I'm going to close the above edit request because I'm finding it hard to understand what references you mean to be adding in the numbered square brackets. If you don't mind, would you respond here with the sources you want used? Just copy-paste the URL/doi of the source, that's fine, I can sort it out from there. In the meantime, I'll try to make some edits that I hope are in the spirit of what you're asking for. -- asilvering ( talk) 22:42, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
Thanks.
Please Change FROM:Career
Troxler authored a bicentennial history pamphlet for the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources in 1976. In 1977, Troxler was invited to present a paper at the University of Edinburgh during a joint program sponsored by university's School of Scottish Studies and its history department. In March 1988, Troxler was promoted to full professor with Elon College's history department.
Troxler's research for Shuttle & Plow: A History of Alamance County, North Carolina (1999) led to later biographies of the African American Reconstruction leader Wyatt Outlaw and Sallie Stockard, a pioneer in women’s higher education. Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that Troxler’s treatment of Stockard is a "masterfully crafted biography."
Troxler's 2011 book, Farming Dissenters, is an investigation of the pre-Revolutionary Regulator Movement, which Alan D. Watson characterized as “the most historiographically exciting and controversial topic in North Carolina's past.” Watson found her account of the May 16, 1771 defeat of the Regulators to be "the best account available of the bloodiest confrontation among white English colonials in the eighteenth century." This period is the context for Troxler's Young Adult history novel, The Red Dog, which received the 2017 Historical Book Award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.
In 2003, the North Carolina Society of Historians recognized her book, Pyle’s Defeat, and a digital reference she edited, Alamance County, N.C., Transcripts of Census and Tax Records: Vol. 1.
to
Career Troxler has written about white Loyalists who fled the Southern Backcountry during the War of the American Revolution and Black Loyalists who joined the British forces in the Southern Theater. Both groupsleft with the British at the war’s end, and Troxler follows their subsequent lives in the loyal colonies of East Florida, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and the Bahama Islands.[14] She has treated the pre-Revolutionary Regulator Movement, which Alan D. Watson characterized as “the most historiographically exciting and controversial topic in North Carolina's past.” Watson found her account of the May 16, 1771 defeat of the Regulators to be “the best account available of the bloodiest confrontation among white English colonials in the eighteenth century.” [15] The background of the Regulator upheaval is the context for a book of Young Adult/Adult historical fiction, for which Troxler received a book award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.[16] Her research for Shuttle & Plow: A History of Alamance County, North Carolina (1999) led to later biographies of the African American Reconstruction leader Wyatt Outlaw [17] and the pioneer in women’s higher education Sallie Stockard. Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that Troxler’s treatment of Stockard is a "masterfully crafted biography."[3]
In Career, what ed asked for re: 14, 15, 16, 3
[3]. Schramm-Pate, Susan (November 2022). Journal of Southern History. 88 (4): 790–792. doi:10.1353/soh.2022.0192. S2CID 253372046.
[14] Carole Troxler | The Loyalist Research Network (unb.ca)
[15] Watson, Alan D. (October 2011). North Carolina Historical Review. 88 (4): 425–426. JSTOR 23523596.
[16] JSTOR 23523596; PW special report - The battle for Alamance: A look at the past and present of one of North Carolina's most divided counties | NC Newsline.
Please change:
Personal life
She was married to George Wesley Troxler (1942–2019) who also worked as a history professor at Elon. They were philanthropic supporters of the university, and in 2013 were honoured for their lifelong impact on the school. In 2010, they jointly received the Christopher Crittenden Memorial Award from the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association.
to
Personal life
She was married to George Wesley Troxler (1942–2019), who also was a history professor at Elon as well as Dean of Cultural and Special Programs. The university honored their service in 2017, and in 2010, they jointly received the Christoper Crittenden Memorial Award from the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association. [17]
[17] Eric Townsend, Today at Elon, February 25, 2014, “History Seminar Room Dedicated;” North Carolina Literary and Historical Association Award Winners | NC DNCR. "Obituary for George Wesley Troxler"The News and Observer. Retrieved 2023-03-05
Please change Publications section to this:
Publications
Books
The Loyalist Experience in North Carolina ( https://books.google.com/books?id=60VCAAAAI AAJ). North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives and History. 1976. ISBN 9780865261143.
Shuttle & Plow: A history of Alamance County, North Carolina, co-authored with William M. Vincent ISBN 9780998731704
Pyle’s Defeat: Deception at the Racepath. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23522999; Hibbard, David, November 12, 2003, Today at Elon, Carole Troxler receives historian society awards.
Farming Dissenters: The Regulator Movement in Piedmont North Carolina (2011) ISBN 9780865263505
Red Dog: A Tale of the Carolina Frontier (2017), a novel. ISBN 9781544869506
Sallie Stockard : Adversities met by an Educated Woman of the New South. ISBN 9780865264922.
Essays in Collections
"Allegiance without Community: East Florida as the Symbol of a Loyalist Contract in the South," Robert M.Calhoon et al, eds., Loyalists and Community in North America (Greenwood Publishing Group, Contributions in American History, No. 158, 1994). ISBN 9780313289477
“Hidden from History: Black Loyalists at Country Harbour, Nova Scotia,” John Pulis, ed., Moving On: Black Loyalists after the American Revolution (Garland Publishing, 1999). ISBN 9781138976535
“Uses of the Bahama Islands by Southern Loyalist Exiles,” Jerry Bannister and Liam Riordan, eds., The Loyal Atlantic: Remaking the British Atlantic in the Revolutionary Era (University of Toronto Press, 2012). ISBN 9781442611092
“Land Tenure as Regulator Grievance and Revolutionary Tool,” in Larry E. Tise and Jeffrey J. Crow, eds., New Voyages to Carolina: Toward Reinterpretation of North Carolina History (University of North Carolina Press, 2017).9781469634593
“Before and after Ramseur’s Mill: Cornwallis’s Complaints and Historical Memory of Southern Backcountry Loyalists,”Rebecca N. Brannon and Joseph C. Moore, eds., Loyalty & Revolution: Essays in Honor of Robert M. Calhoon (Universityof South Carolina Press, 2019). ISBN 9781611179507.
Articles in Professional Journals
Acadiensis: Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region (1990, 2008), Nova Scotia Historical Review (1988, 1992), Journal of Southern History (1989), Georgia Historical Quarterly (1983), Florida Historical Quarterly (1981), North Carolina Historical Review (1979, 1990, 2000), Journal of Backcountry Studies (2008), Journal of Scotch-Irish Studies (2002). CorbettPOE ( talk) 01:54, 8 March 2024 (UTC) reply

Reactivating edit request and courtesy pinging asilvering, who may find previous edit requests drafted at User:CorbettPOE/sandbox helpful. Rotideypoc41352 ( talk · contribs) 18:52, 8 March 2024 (UTC) reply

shorten submitted list of publications

I submitted a list of article publications, which now I think is silly and excessive. I am adding chapters from collected works under Books and simply listing the professional journals that have published articles. Thanks. CorbettPOE ( talk) 20:20, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply

@ CorbettPOE did you see my response above? For now, I suggest taking this a step at a time. Right now you have two edit requests so please let those be addressed first before making any additional requests/comments. S0091 ( talk) 20:29, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
Absolutely! This can wait. Thank you SO MUCH for taking the time and effort to deal with me. I have taken time off from writing to address this Wikipedia issue, (which I did not instigate), so I happily will return to writing -- as soon as I do taxes. You're a jewel. CorbettPOE ( talk) 20:33, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
@ CorbettPOE I am aware of the request to have the article deleted ( WP:Articles for deletion/Carole W. Troxler) and know you did not create it so are left with dealing with it. Also, I'm not sure what's worse...doing taxes or being a new editor trying to navigate Wikipedia. :) S0091 ( talk) 20:40, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carole W. Troxler

I wish to provide a photo and some additional publications, as well as correct a name spelling. The page is protected. Please help. username CorbettPOE. Thank you

CorbettPOE ( talk) 21:50, 20 February 2024 (UTC) reply

Hi @ CorbettPOE I am not an admin but when you make a request, you need to specific and it should be something that is actionable. Have you uploaded the photo to either Wikipedia or WP:Commons so there is a file name? See WP:Uploading images for more information and be mindful of copyright. Generally, its best to use a photo you took so copyright is clear. What is the misspelling? For future requests you might find the WP:Edit Request Wizard helpful. S0091 ( talk) 22:10, 20 February 2024 (UTC) reply
Hello there CorbettPOE. S0091 provided a good response above, and in the future, I suggest that you try filing an edit request via the wizard that is linked above if you want to make changes to a protected page and need some help formatting a request. The Night Watch (talk) 23:09, 20 February 2024 (UTC) reply


  • What I think should be changed (format using {{ textdiff}}):

"Her sixth book, The Red Dog: A Tale of the Carolina Frontier (Lizzy's Yarn), received the 2017 Historical Book Award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.[1]

  • Why it should be changed: This award is not as notable as the subject's non-fiction books are. Also, she received two other awards from this Society, which while well-established and reputable, is not a professional historians' organization. I suggest the text above be deleted; If an editor wishes to use the marked text, you may wish to replace the paragraph with the following and add the following reference to the one that is there.

Change to "Troxler received three Historical Book Awards from the North Carolina Society of Historians."

  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):

[1] CorbettPOE ( talk) 18:39, 1 March 2024 (UTC) reply

Hi @ CorbettPOE, if you can provide the URL directly when making edit requests, that would be very helpful. I've added these to the article, though not quite as you asked for. Please do make another edit request if there is anything else you'd like to change. I'm looking into the other ones you've added to this page as well. -- asilvering ( talk) 22:11, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply

References

  1. ^ David Hibbard, November 12, 2003, Today at Elon, Elon.edu

Please change Career Section


  • What I think should be changed (format using {{ textdiff}}):

Please change

Career Troxler has written about the Regulator Movement during the American Revolution,[2] Alamance County, Sallie Stockard,[3] Wyatt Outlaw, and Loyalists who fled the lower South for British East Florida after the American Revolution.[4] Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that her book on Sallie Stockyard is a "masterfully crafted biography."[3] Troxler authored a bicentennial history pamphlet for the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources in 1976.[5] In 1977, Troxler was invited to present a paper at the University of Edinburgh during a joint program sponsored by university's School of Scottish Studies and its history department. In March 1988, Troxler was promoted to full professor with Elon College's history department.[6]
+
Career Troxler has written about white Loyalists who fled the Southern Backcountry during the War of the American Revolution and Black Loyalists who joined the British forces in the Southern Theater. Both groups left with the British at the war’s end, and Troxler follows their subsequent lives in the loyal colonies of East Florida, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and the Bahama Islands.[14] She has treated the pre-Revolutionary Regulator Movement, which Alan D. Watson characterized as “the most historiographically exciting and controversial topic in North Carolina's past. Watson found her account of the May 16, 1771 defeat of the Regulators to be “the best account available of the bloodiest confrontation among white English colonials in the eighteenth century. [15] The background of the Regulator upheaval is the context for a book of Young Adult/Adult historical fiction, for which Troxler received a book award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.[16] Her research for Shuttle & Plow: A History of Alamance County, North Carolina (1999) led to later biographies of the African American Reconstruction leader Wyatt Outlaw [17] and the pioneer in women’s higher education Sallie Stockard. Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that Troxler’s treatment of Stockard is a "masterfully crafted biography."[3]
  • Why it should be changed:

Continuity and connections in the subject's research and publication do not appear as originally written. Also, the geographic term "lower South" with respect to the loyalists treated is incorrect, and "Stockard" is misspelled as "Stockyard."

  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):

[1]

— Preceding unsigned comment added by CorbettPOE ( talkcontribs) 19:44, 1 March 2024 (UTC) reply

References

  1. ^ Carole Troxler. The Loyalist Research Network (unb.ca; North Carolina Historical Review 88:425 (October 2011^ Jump up to:a b c Review of Sallie Stockard: Schramm-Pate, Susan (November 2022). Journal of Southern History. 88 (4): 790–792. doi:10.1353/soh.2022.0192. S2CID 253372046.

I have been told here to use the request edit wiki but the page Carole W. Troxler is extended protected

The subject page is extended protected. I followed wiki for edit request and used template, but I do not have the editing privilege. CorbettPOE ( talk) 18:57, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply

Hi @ CorbettPOE I fixed a couple formatting issues with the templates but other than that, you have successfully submitted your request so someone will be along to review it. I am not sure what the normal turn around is but a month would not be surprising given we are all volunteers. In the interim, I will at least fix that typo and see if I find someone willing to review it so maybe it will not take as long. S0091 ( talk) 19:43, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
@ CorbettPOE, I'm going to close the above edit request because I'm finding it hard to understand what references you mean to be adding in the numbered square brackets. If you don't mind, would you respond here with the sources you want used? Just copy-paste the URL/doi of the source, that's fine, I can sort it out from there. In the meantime, I'll try to make some edits that I hope are in the spirit of what you're asking for. -- asilvering ( talk) 22:42, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
Thanks.
Please Change FROM:Career
Troxler authored a bicentennial history pamphlet for the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources in 1976. In 1977, Troxler was invited to present a paper at the University of Edinburgh during a joint program sponsored by university's School of Scottish Studies and its history department. In March 1988, Troxler was promoted to full professor with Elon College's history department.
Troxler's research for Shuttle & Plow: A History of Alamance County, North Carolina (1999) led to later biographies of the African American Reconstruction leader Wyatt Outlaw and Sallie Stockard, a pioneer in women’s higher education. Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that Troxler’s treatment of Stockard is a "masterfully crafted biography."
Troxler's 2011 book, Farming Dissenters, is an investigation of the pre-Revolutionary Regulator Movement, which Alan D. Watson characterized as “the most historiographically exciting and controversial topic in North Carolina's past.” Watson found her account of the May 16, 1771 defeat of the Regulators to be "the best account available of the bloodiest confrontation among white English colonials in the eighteenth century." This period is the context for Troxler's Young Adult history novel, The Red Dog, which received the 2017 Historical Book Award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.
In 2003, the North Carolina Society of Historians recognized her book, Pyle’s Defeat, and a digital reference she edited, Alamance County, N.C., Transcripts of Census and Tax Records: Vol. 1.
to
Career Troxler has written about white Loyalists who fled the Southern Backcountry during the War of the American Revolution and Black Loyalists who joined the British forces in the Southern Theater. Both groupsleft with the British at the war’s end, and Troxler follows their subsequent lives in the loyal colonies of East Florida, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and the Bahama Islands.[14] She has treated the pre-Revolutionary Regulator Movement, which Alan D. Watson characterized as “the most historiographically exciting and controversial topic in North Carolina's past.” Watson found her account of the May 16, 1771 defeat of the Regulators to be “the best account available of the bloodiest confrontation among white English colonials in the eighteenth century.” [15] The background of the Regulator upheaval is the context for a book of Young Adult/Adult historical fiction, for which Troxler received a book award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.[16] Her research for Shuttle & Plow: A History of Alamance County, North Carolina (1999) led to later biographies of the African American Reconstruction leader Wyatt Outlaw [17] and the pioneer in women’s higher education Sallie Stockard. Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that Troxler’s treatment of Stockard is a "masterfully crafted biography."[3]
In Career, what ed asked for re: 14, 15, 16, 3
[3]. Schramm-Pate, Susan (November 2022). Journal of Southern History. 88 (4): 790–792. doi:10.1353/soh.2022.0192. S2CID 253372046.
[14] Carole Troxler | The Loyalist Research Network (unb.ca)
[15] Watson, Alan D. (October 2011). North Carolina Historical Review. 88 (4): 425–426. JSTOR 23523596.
[16] JSTOR 23523596; PW special report - The battle for Alamance: A look at the past and present of one of North Carolina's most divided counties | NC Newsline.
Please change:
Personal life
She was married to George Wesley Troxler (1942–2019) who also worked as a history professor at Elon. They were philanthropic supporters of the university, and in 2013 were honoured for their lifelong impact on the school. In 2010, they jointly received the Christopher Crittenden Memorial Award from the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association.
to
Personal life
She was married to George Wesley Troxler (1942–2019), who also was a history professor at Elon as well as Dean of Cultural and Special Programs. The university honored their service in 2017, and in 2010, they jointly received the Christoper Crittenden Memorial Award from the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association. [17]
[17] Eric Townsend, Today at Elon, February 25, 2014, “History Seminar Room Dedicated;” North Carolina Literary and Historical Association Award Winners | NC DNCR. "Obituary for George Wesley Troxler"The News and Observer. Retrieved 2023-03-05
Please change Publications section to this:
Publications
Books
The Loyalist Experience in North Carolina ( https://books.google.com/books?id=60VCAAAAI AAJ). North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives and History. 1976. ISBN 9780865261143.
Shuttle & Plow: A history of Alamance County, North Carolina, co-authored with William M. Vincent ISBN 9780998731704
Pyle’s Defeat: Deception at the Racepath. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23522999; Hibbard, David, November 12, 2003, Today at Elon, Carole Troxler receives historian society awards.
Farming Dissenters: The Regulator Movement in Piedmont North Carolina (2011) ISBN 9780865263505
Red Dog: A Tale of the Carolina Frontier (2017), a novel. ISBN 9781544869506
Sallie Stockard : Adversities met by an Educated Woman of the New South. ISBN 9780865264922.
Essays in Collections
"Allegiance without Community: East Florida as the Symbol of a Loyalist Contract in the South," Robert M.Calhoon et al, eds., Loyalists and Community in North America (Greenwood Publishing Group, Contributions in American History, No. 158, 1994). ISBN 9780313289477
“Hidden from History: Black Loyalists at Country Harbour, Nova Scotia,” John Pulis, ed., Moving On: Black Loyalists after the American Revolution (Garland Publishing, 1999). ISBN 9781138976535
“Uses of the Bahama Islands by Southern Loyalist Exiles,” Jerry Bannister and Liam Riordan, eds., The Loyal Atlantic: Remaking the British Atlantic in the Revolutionary Era (University of Toronto Press, 2012). ISBN 9781442611092
“Land Tenure as Regulator Grievance and Revolutionary Tool,” in Larry E. Tise and Jeffrey J. Crow, eds., New Voyages to Carolina: Toward Reinterpretation of North Carolina History (University of North Carolina Press, 2017).9781469634593
“Before and after Ramseur’s Mill: Cornwallis’s Complaints and Historical Memory of Southern Backcountry Loyalists,”Rebecca N. Brannon and Joseph C. Moore, eds., Loyalty & Revolution: Essays in Honor of Robert M. Calhoon (Universityof South Carolina Press, 2019). ISBN 9781611179507.
Articles in Professional Journals
Acadiensis: Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region (1990, 2008), Nova Scotia Historical Review (1988, 1992), Journal of Southern History (1989), Georgia Historical Quarterly (1983), Florida Historical Quarterly (1981), North Carolina Historical Review (1979, 1990, 2000), Journal of Backcountry Studies (2008), Journal of Scotch-Irish Studies (2002). CorbettPOE ( talk) 01:54, 8 March 2024 (UTC) reply

Reactivating edit request and courtesy pinging asilvering, who may find previous edit requests drafted at User:CorbettPOE/sandbox helpful. Rotideypoc41352 ( talk · contribs) 18:52, 8 March 2024 (UTC) reply

shorten submitted list of publications

I submitted a list of article publications, which now I think is silly and excessive. I am adding chapters from collected works under Books and simply listing the professional journals that have published articles. Thanks. CorbettPOE ( talk) 20:20, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply

@ CorbettPOE did you see my response above? For now, I suggest taking this a step at a time. Right now you have two edit requests so please let those be addressed first before making any additional requests/comments. S0091 ( talk) 20:29, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
Absolutely! This can wait. Thank you SO MUCH for taking the time and effort to deal with me. I have taken time off from writing to address this Wikipedia issue, (which I did not instigate), so I happily will return to writing -- as soon as I do taxes. You're a jewel. CorbettPOE ( talk) 20:33, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply
@ CorbettPOE I am aware of the request to have the article deleted ( WP:Articles for deletion/Carole W. Troxler) and know you did not create it so are left with dealing with it. Also, I'm not sure what's worse...doing taxes or being a new editor trying to navigate Wikipedia. :) S0091 ( talk) 20:40, 2 March 2024 (UTC) reply

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