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Spring 2011: Malvina Matthews: The Murderess Madam of Civil War-Era Natchez, by Joyce L. Broussard
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Fall 2010: Father Nathaniel and the Greenwood Movement, by Paul T. Murray
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Summer 2010: Served Up On a Silver Platter: Ross Barnett, the Tourism Industry, and Mississippi's Civil War Centennial, by Matthew Reonas
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Spring 2010: The Three R's—Reading, 'Riting, and Race:
The Evolution of Race in Mississippi History Textbooks, 1900-1995, by Rebecca Miller Davis
Winter 2009: Peter Little and the Pennsylvania Connection in Antebellum Natchez, by Chad Vanderford
Fall 2009: "The Saddest Story of the Whole Movement": The Clyde Kennard Case and the Search for Racial Reconciliation in Mississippi, 1955—2007, by Timothy J. Minchin and John A. Salmond
Summer 2009: A Black Vice President in the Gilded Age? Senator Blanche Kelso Bruce and the National Republican Convention of 1880, by Nicholas Patler
Spring 2009: "The Fight for Men's Minds": The Aftermath of the Ole Miss Riot of 1962, by Charles W. Eagles
Winter 2008: William F. Winter and the Politics of Racial Moderation in Mississippi, by Charles C. Bolton
Fall 2008: Balancing Agriculture with Industry: Capital, Labor, and the Public Good in Mississippi's Home-Grown New Deal, by Connie Lester
Summer 2008: Occupied Natchez, Elite Women, and the Feminization of the Civil War, by Joyce L. Broussard
Spring 2008: Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis: Rivals in Popular Prints, by Harold Holzer
Winter 2007: Looking for Bob: Black Confederate Pensioners After the Civil War, by James G. Hollandsworth, Jr.
Fall 2007: Paving the Trace, by Jack D. Elliott, Jr.
Spring 2007: Movie Theaters in Twentieth-Century Jackson, Mississippi, by Jerry Dallas
Winter 2006: Mississippi's Extraordinary Month, November 1973: The Demise of the Sovereignty Commission and of Unprofessional Leadership at the Mississippi State Penitentiary, by Christopher P. Lehman
Fall 2006: Education Transforms the Mississippi Legislature, by Jere Nash and Andy Taggart
Summer 2006: The Tupelo Homesteads: New Deal Agrarian Experimentation, by Fred C. Smith
Spring 2006: Theodore G. Bilbo and the Decline of Public Racism, 1938-1947, by Robert L. Fleegler