Ryan Quint, a native of Maine, earned his degree in history from the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, VA. He has worked in the field of public history, including at the George Washington Foundation, Colonial Williamsburg, and the National Park Service. Ryan has been involved with Emerging Civil War (emergingcivilwar.com) since 2013, and his first book, Determined to Stand and Fight: The Battle of Monocacy, was published by Savas Beatie in 2017 as part of the Emerging Civil War Series.
"""The battle of Dranesville has fallen off the radar screen for most Civil War enthusiasts. Small and early in the war, the fight paled in comparison to later, larger actions. Ryan Quint goes back to carefully uncover not only the details of the fight itself but the tense context surrounding it in a part of Virginia where neighbor had reason to distrust neighbor. Well-known characters learn important lessons that inform later, more famous, actions. Quint's nuanced analysis of events and people recovers valuable lost history and helps us see the familiar in new ways.""--Chris Mackowski, Ph.D., editor-in-chief, Emerging Civil War ""Written with outstanding detail and clarity, the early phase of the Civil War comes into clear focus in this book. The fighting at Dranesville shows the war's impact on one community, the baptism of fire for several units, and the challenges faced by commanders regarding civilians and military occupation.""--Robert Dunkerly, author of To the Bitter End and co-author of Embattled Capital and Force of a Cyclone ""Ryan Quint's Dranesville is more than a battle narrative. It is a wonderfully woven, dramatically written case study of new soldiers, new commanders, a new war, and the civilians suddenly swept up in its violence. For a few weeks in late 1861 and early 1862, 'Dranesville' headlined virtually every newspaper in America, North and South. Quint has hauled Dranesville out of the shadows, delivering us a layered account of an early Union victory in Virginia and a hard day for James Ewell Brown Stuart--a study that in its details reveals much that is important about a new war in rapid evolution.""--John Hennessy, National Park Service historian (ret.) and author of Return to Bull Run"