(2023-2024)
John Anderson, Director
John Anderson's love for the history of the Civil War was kindled in 1957 with the purchase of a children's book on the life of Robert E. Lee. At the age of 10, his father took the family to Gettysburg, which continued to fuel his lifelong interest in the period.
As a college student at NYU in 1972, John reached out to Bruce Catton about a writing project on the Civil War. Mr. Catton responded with a letter of encouragement, which John says makes his election many years later to the Board of the CWRTDC -- which Mr. Catton helped found -- truly an honor. John is also a member of the Ulysses S. Grant Society and the Grant Monuments Association.
In the late 1990's, John and his wife considered producing a feature film on the life of General Grant. During the course of that project, John reports that he had the good fortune to take many tours with Ed Bearss through the Smithsonian program. He also contributed ideas for enhancing the battlefield narration at Chickamauga, which were adopted and put into place in 2019.
John holds an MS in International Finance from Brandies University and a BA from New York University. At NYU, John was awarded the Thomas Wolfe Award for Creative Writing. In addition, John did graduate work at the MIT Sloan School of Management and at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has written several technical books that are archived at the Computer Museum in Silicon Valley and at many major universities.
John has spent his working career involved in international marketing for Digital Equipment Corporation (now Hewlett Packard) and served as special technology consultant to Ford Motor Company's National Dealer Council, where he pioneered early internet solutions for the automotive industry.
Although having an active career in the high-tech industry, John has also spent over 25 years working to train students in business. In recent years, he has been involved in developing business curricula for veterans. For his work in connection with the development of federally certifiable degree programs in this area, John was awarded a Congressional Citation in 2016.
John is currently retired from the faculty of Diablo Valley College, where he served as an adjunct Professor of Business and Finance. He is most proud of his work as a faculty advisor to veterans and for developing training programs for faculty working with veterans. John currently serves on the Board of the Peter Sategna Educational Foundation, which awards scholarships to veterans and other worthy individuals.
William P. Binzel, President & Chair
Bill Binzel is a native of southwestern Ohio who has resided in the Washington, DC area for the past forty years. A retired attorney, he spent twelve years on the staff of the U.S. House of Representatives, eleven years in corporate affairs in the financial services sector, and ten years with a nonprofit foundation. His undergraduate degree from the University of Wisconsin is in U.S. History. A life-long student of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln, and the Lincoln assassination, Mr. Binzel is also vice president of the Surratt Society (an organization dedicated to the study of Lincoln’s assassination), a docent at the Surratt House Museum in Clinton, MD, and a narrator of the Surratt Society’s twelve-hour bus tours of the twelve-day escape route of John Wilkes Booth from Ford’s Theatre to the Garrett’s farm in Caroline County, VA.
John Ciccone, Director
Kurt E. DeSoto, Immediate Past President & Director
Kurt DeSoto has previously served as both President and Vice President of the Round Table and has held various other positions on the Board other years. Kurt explains that his love of history was germinated by his high school teachers at Douglas MacArthur High School in San Antonio, Texas, and at Thomas Edison High School in Alexandria, Virginia, and then was incubated by the legendary Professor Michael Foley, arguably one of the best and engaging professors at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. His interest in Civil War history was nurtured when he was invited on a tour of Gettysburg led by member Henry Rivera and then was encouraged to get involved with the Round Table by Susan Claffey.
A former Navy Supply Corps officer serving on ships in both the Arctic and Vietnam, Bill is fascinated with the management, logistics and politics of war. He was one of the first to have access to the decrypted diary and journal of Montgomery Meigs, President Lincoln’s Quartermaster General. Employing this rich source material, Bill organized a conference on Meigs and authored several chapters for a book (which he also edited) on the proceedings published for the US Capitol Historical Society.
As a long-time resident of Alexandria, Bill chaired the Alexandria Historical Society and was instrumental in saving several historical properties in the city, including the slave prison, which is now a publicly owned museum. Visit https://www.alexandriava.gov/FreedomHouse
Retired from a Federal career primarily with the Office of Management and Budget and the US Environmental Protection Agency, Bill continues to be involved with local and environmental projects.
Steve Jaren, Director
Steve is a relatively new member of the Round Table, but has been increasingly involved in its operation. This is his first year as a Director. One of his projects was the creation of the Round Table’s “Civil War History Education/Learning Links," (located HERE or at https://cwrtdc-meetings.blogspot.com/2020/04/civilwar-history-education-learning.html), a timely resource given the pandemic and the need to advise CW history enthusuasts of relevant programming and information available online. Steve has also coordinated the Round Table's membership drive and has welcomed new members via email and, lately, during its Zoom meetings.
Steve retired in March 2020, with both federal and private sector experience in the procurement field. Most of his career was spent as a federal civil servant supporting the U.S. Army. Being a U.S. Air Force “brat,” he does not call one place home.
His educational background includes a B.S. in Business from Indiana University, and an M.S. in Acquisition and Contract Management from Florida Institute of Technology. His interest in the American Civil War started with his father and has steadily increased over the past five years. An area that he hopes to research further is Welsh American involvement in the Civil War; Steve was born in Ireland and his mother was a WWII GI bride from Britain with an English father and a Welsh mother.
Scott Sanger was raised in the
capital city of the Confederacy, and has lived for over 30 years in the capital
city of the United States. His love for Civil War history recently grew when he
discovered that his great, great, great grandparents immigrated to America from
Europe in 1866 aboard a steamship that served in both the Confederate States Navy
(SS Margaret and Jessie, 1862-1863) and, after being captured, the Union
Navy (USS Gettysburg, 1863-1865).
Scott currently works in the Sales Division of the DC Convention Center after having recently completed an extensive, 25-year study of underpaid, struggling artists at Arena Stage, The Shakespeare Theatre, Studio Theatre, Warner Theatre, and The Kennedy Center, for which he deeply imbedded himself in those organizations as an underpaid, struggling arts administrator.
Scott serves on the Finance Committee and the Social Justice Initiative Committee of St. Peter’s Church on Capitol Hill, and is a member of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, the Anacostia Watershed Society, the Potomac Conservancy, the Lincoln Group of the District of Columbia, and the DC History Center.
Jon F. Willen, Director
Jon Willen, M.D. is a retired infectious disease specialist who many know as the guy in the bloody apron at Civil War reenactments. Dr. Willen has put his medical expertise into researching the medical treatment Abraham Lincoln received during his time as President, most notably the actions of Dr. Charles Leale and other doctors who rushed to Lincoln’s aid at the assassination.
Dr. Willen served last year as Vice-President of the Civil War Round Table of the District of Columbia and currently serves as the Vice President of the Lincoln Group of the District of Columbia (http://www.lincolngroup.org/). He is also a docent at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in DC and at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring, Maryland.