Greg O'Brien

Associate Professor & Department Head

History

Email Address: wgobrien@uncg.edu

Phone: 336.334.5204

Education

Ph.D. History, University of Kentucky
M.A. History, James Madison University
B.A. History, Political Science minor, Randolph-Macon College

Research

Greg O’Brien’s research interests lie in ethnohistory, American Indians of the Southeast, American environmental history (particularly in the South), the American Revolutionary era, and the history of New Orleans. He has focused extensively on Choctaw Indian history before the 1830s.

“Pre-removal Choctaw History with Greg O’Brien,” an interview by the Choctaw Nation Historic Preservation Office, October 6, 2020.

Academic Positions

  • Head, Department of History, UNC-Greensboro, 2019-present
  • Associate Head, Department of History, UNC-Greensboro, 2017-2019
  • Associate Professor, Department of History, UNC-Greensboro, 2008-present
  • Executive Editor, Native South journal, 2013-2018
  • Director of Graduate Studies, Department of History, UNC-Greensboro, 2010-2015
  • Professor of History at the University of Southern Mississippi, 1998-2008
  • Visiting Professor of Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, 2004
  • Director of Graduate Studies, Department of History, U. of Southern Mississippi, 2002-2004

Selected Publications

Book covers published by Greg O'Brien

Dissertations Directed at UNCG

  • Katie Duckworth (M.A. from UNCG), “Disease, Healing and Resilience: Cherokees and Moravians before Removal” (2024) Behavorial Health Psychologist, Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Comprehensive Cancer Center
  • Arlen Hanson (MA from UNCG), “Troubled Voices: Choctaws in Mass Deportation and Ethnic Cleansing” (2021) Instructor at UNC-Pembroke
  • Stuart Marshall (M.A. from UNCG), “The Age of Junaluska: Eastern Cherokee Sovereignty in the Long Civil War Era” (2023) Visiting Assistant Professor at Sewanee: University of the South
  • Sarah McCartney (MA from William & Mary), “O’er Mountains And Rivers’: Community And Commerce In The Greenbrier River Valley In The Late Eighteenth Century” (2018) Assistant Teaching Professor for NIAHD (National Institute of American History & Democracy), College of William & Mary
  • Jamie Mize (MA from North Georgia), “Sons of Selu: Manhood and Gendered Power in Cherokee Society, 1775-1846” (2017) Associate Professor of History at UNC-Pembroke
  • Jewel Parker (MA from Appalachian State University), “The Intercultural Origins of Health Care in the Antebellum South” (2024) Full-time Lecturer at Appalachian State University
  • Steven Peach (MA from Northern Illinois), “‘The Three Rivers Have Talked’: The Creek Indians and Community Politics in the Native South, 1753-1821” (2016) Associate Professor of History at Tarleton State University
  • Jason Stroud (MA from N.C. State), “Crime, Justice, and Order in the North Carolina Piedmont, 1760-1806” (2019) Assistant Professor of History at Greensboro College, NC
  • Monica R. Ward (MA from Rutgers), “Little Tallassee: A Creek Indian Colonial Town” (2019) Full-time Lecturer at Bryant University, Rhode Island