Brett J. Derbes, Ph.D.

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Brett J. Derbes

Brett J. Derbes, Ph.D.


Brett J. Derbes serves as the Administrative Director of TSHA, as well as Managing Editor of the Handbook of Texas.  He was born in Opelousas, Louisiana, and grew up in Dallas-Fort Worth.  He began his undergraduate degree at Tarrant County College (TCC) and transferred to the University of North Texas (UNT), where he earned his B.A. and M.A. in History (2007, 2011).  He accepted an academic scholarship to Auburn University in Alabama, where he earned a Ph.D. in History (2018).  His research focuses on inmate labor at state penitentiaries in the Antebellum and Civil War South.

Dr. Derbes joined the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) as a member in 2008 and began working as a graduate student intern on the Handbook of Civil War Texas the following year.  At Auburn University he was a graduate student assistant for the Encyclopedia of Alabama in 2012.  He earned a certificate in Archival History and focused his research on Digital State Encyclopedia (DSE) projects.  Dr. Derbes joined the TSHA Staff in June 2015 as Managing Editor of the Handbook of Texas

His publications include chapters in Incarcerated Women: A History of Struggles, Oppression, and Resistance in American Prisons (2017), Reconsidering Southern Labor History: Race, Class, and Power (2018), as well as articles in the Journal of African American History, Louisiana History, and Alabama Review.

He is married to Kimberly and they have a son, Alex.

TSHA Committees

Handbook of Texas Advisory Committee
Texas State Historian Committee

Handbook Entries

Title Contributor Type
Abbott, Vincent Paul [Vinnie Paul] Author
Arkansas Post Author
Beeson, William Edward Author
Bingham, Francis Revision Author
Blackshear, Edward Lavoisier Revision Author
Bolling, Eugene S. Author
Box, Nelson A. Revision Author
Brooks, Samuel Houston Author
Carter, John Calvin Author
Cathey, William Henry Author
Charles, Isaac Newton Author
Cibolo Creek Ranch Author
Civil War Revision Author
Claren, Oscar von Revision Author
Cleveland, Larkin Green Author
Coffee, Aaron Revision Author
Craig, Washington de la Fayette Revision Author
Crump, Richard Phillip Revision Author
Dark, Joseph Neal Revision Author
Dial, Hamilton C. Revision Author
Diamond, William Winfield Revision Author
Donelson, John Lawrence Revision Author
Dove, Thomas J. Revision Author
Earle, Thomas Revision Author
Ector, Wiley B. Author
Egbert, Daniel Revision Author
Eleventh Texas Infantry Author
Eleventh Texas Infantry Battalion [Spaight’s] Author
Elmore, Henry Marshall Revision Author
English, Levi Revision Author
Estes, William E. Author
Fisher, Samuel Rhoads, Jr. Revision Author
Fort Moritas Author
Gage, David Aaron Revision Author
Garland, Robert Rice Revision Author
Grant, George W. Revision Author
Hampton, George James Revision Author
Haynie, Samuel G. Revision Author
Helm, John Jackson [Jack] Marshall Revision Author
Kerr, William Penn Author
Liberty Bell Tour of Texas Author
Morgan, Hiram S. Author
Nathusius, Otto Author
Redwood, William H. Revision Author
Rodriguez, Andres S., Jr. Revision Author
Samuel Huston College Revision Author
Scott, William Thomas Revision Author
Second Texas Cavalry Author
Secrest, Washington Hampton Revision Author
Shannon, William Russell Revision Author
Shaw, James B. Revision Author
Shelby, David Author
Siemering, August Revision Author
Sigler, William Nall Author
Singleton, George Washington Author
Sixteenth Texas Cavalry Author
Sixth Texas Infantry Author
Smith, Morgan L. Author
Smith, Niles F. Revision Author
Sneed, Thomas Eskridge Revision Author
St. Mary's Hall Revision Author
Stanley, John H. Stephen Revision Author
Staples, Sidney Lee Author
Stewart, James O., Jr. Author
Summers, William E. Revision Author
Sydnor, John Seabrook Revision Author
Texas Medical Association Revision Author
Thatcher, Thomas Author
Thirteenth Texas Cavalry Author
Thirty-Sixth Texas Cavalry Author
Thruston, Algernon Sidney Author
Twenty-Fourth Texas Cavalry Author
Van Zandt, Isaac Revision Author
Wallace, Caleb Author
Watson, John R. Revision Author
Weaver, William Thomas Green Author
Wells, Francis Flournoy Revision Author
Westall, Thomas Author
Western, Thomas Gehot Revision Author
Whetstone, Peter Revision Author
Whiting, Samuel Author
Wilbarger, Mathias Author
Wooten, Goodall Harrison Author
Wooten, Thomas Dudley Author
Wortham, Louis J. Author
Wright, Edward Bingham Revision Author
Smith, Thomas Ingles Revision Author
Snell, Martin Kingsley Revision Author
Preston, Jasper Newton Revision Author
Goff, Benson Revision Author
Jones, Allen Carter Revision Author
Perry, Cicero Rufus Revision Author
Dwyer, Elizabeth Agnes Revision Author
Matthews, James Fiske Revision Author

Commemorating 250 years of American independence through the stories, people, and places that shaped Texas and the nation.

As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary in 2026, Texans have a unique opportunity to reflect on the state’s role in the American story. Through exhibitions, programs, educational initiatives, and community events across Texas, Texas America250 encourages celebration, reflection, and commemoration at both local and statewide levels. At the Texas State Historical Association, we are proud to support this important moment through our mission-driven work in history education and public engagement, including Texas History Day, and we invite students, educators, and communities to explore this milestone in meaningful ways.

On July 4, 2026, we will celebrate the 250th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence and the birth of the greatest nation in the history of the world. “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” Long may these ideals live in the heart of every Texan and every American. May God bless all who have defended our freedoms that we enjoy each day. And God bless the United States of America.

Greg Abbott, Governor of Texas

Commemorating 250 years of American independence through the stories, people, and places that shaped Texas and the nation.

As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary in 2026, Texans have a unique opportunity to reflect on the state’s role in the American story. Through exhibitions, programs, educational initiatives, and community events across Texas, Texas America250 encourages celebration, reflection, and commemoration at both local and statewide levels. At the Texas State Historical Association, we are proud to support this important moment through our mission-driven work in history education and public engagement, including Texas History Day, and we invite students, educators, and communities to explore this milestone in meaningful ways.

On July 4, 2026, we will celebrate the 250th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence and the birth of the greatest nation in the history of the world. “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” Long may these ideals live in the heart of every Texan and every American. May God bless all who have defended our freedoms that we enjoy each day. And God bless the United States of America.

Greg Abbott, Governor of Texas

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Discover commemorative events across Texas

Explore local and statewide programs, exhibitions, and public events connected to the semiquincentennial and the many stories that shape our shared history.

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