Revolution 250 Podcast - podcast cover

Revolution 250 Podcast

Robert Allisonrevolution250.org
Revolution 250 is a consortium of organizations in New England planning commemorations of the American Revolution's 250th anniversary. https://revolution250.org/Through this podcast you will meet many of the people involved in these commemorations, and learn about the people who brought about the Revolution--which began here. To support Revolution 250, visit https://www.masshist.org/rev250Theme Music: "Road to Boston" fifes: Doug Quigley, Peter Emerick; Drums: Dave Emerick
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Episodes

"Mad" Anthony Wayne with Mary Stockwell

From 1776 through the end of the war, Anthony Wayne was at the forefront of a defensive line, or in leading the rear guard staving off a British attack on American forces. Intelligent, stubborn, argumentative, bold and daring, Wayne also was a womanizer with a fondness for drink who semed to have lost the trust of Washington when, in 1791, the President entrusted him with building an army to maintain peace in Ohio after two American armies had already been devastated by Native American forces le...

Mar 21, 202345 minSeason 4Ep. 12

Poor Richard's Women with Nancy Rubin Stuart

Benjamin Franklin was one of America's most famous citizens. He was a printer, scientist, philosopher, diplomat, inventor, postmaster and a self-proclaimed lover of women. Nancy Rubin Stuart tells us about some of the women Franklin loved, in three countries and two continents, including his wife Deborah, Madame Brillon and Madame Helvetius, Margaret Stevenson and her daughter Polly, and Kitty Ray of Block Island, whose lives intertwined with Franklin's, and whose stories she tells in her new bo...

Mar 14, 202348 minSeason 4Ep. 11

Major General Chastellux & Revolutionary America with Iris De Rode

Though he didn't arrive in America until 1780, Major General Francois-Jean de Chastellux had a profound impact on the war's outcome and on the French-American relationship. He also enjoyed a close personal friendship with George Washington, and as a French philosophe was elected a member of both the American Philosophical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Iris De Rode has discovered the Chastellux family archives (dating back to the 1300s) near her childhood home in France, ...

Mar 10, 202340 minSeason 4Ep. 10

Bullet Strikes, Powder Horns & Archaeology Along Battle Road

We talk with Joel Bohy , Director of Historic Arms & Miltaria at Bruneau & Co. Auctioneers , and a regular appraiser on Antiques Roadshow , about the weapons and equipment used on April 19, 1775. Muskets, powderhorns, and the stories of the people who carried them. Tell us what you think! Send us a text message!...

Feb 28, 202340 minSeason 4Ep. 9

Contagion of Liberty - Smallpox in the American Revolution with Andrew Wehrman

Smallpox--the most devastating disease in human history--struck the American colonies in 1773. Andrew Wehrman (Central Michigan University) joins us to talk about the political responses to the disease, in Marblehead and Salem, Massachusetts, and Norfolk, Virginia, and what Americans learned about the contagion and how to combat it, as he discusses in his new book, Contagion of Liberty: The Politics of Smallpox in the American Revolutio n. Tell us what you think! Send us a text message!...

Feb 21, 202341 minSeason 4Ep. 8

A Conversation with President James Madison

We talk with James Madison, President, Secretary of State, Congressman, architect of the Constitution, and political player in a wide-ranging conversation about politics, religion, slavery, Dolley Madison, and some of the people he knew. Our discussion was facilitated by Kyle Jenks , and we are grateful to @madisonportrayer for this opportunity to talk with the "Great Little Madison." Find Mr. Madison on Instagram @Madisonportrayer, or @leaguemostinterestinggentlemen Tell us what you think! Send...

Feb 14, 202340 minSeason 4Ep. 7

"God Save the Commonwealth": Election Day sermons, 1763-1793, John Hancock, & Hockey Cards with Jeffrey Griffith

Every year on Election Day the new Massachusetts Assembly would take their seats, and would mark the occasion with a sermon delivered by one of the clergy. Jeffrey Griffith has analyzed the Election Sermons from 1763 to 1793, and the themes and messages clergy delivered during this time of Revolution and change. Among his other interests are the career of John Hancock--whose grandfather delivered the sermon in the 1720s--and whose visage graced a trading card in the 1890s--and hockey cards. Tell...

Feb 07, 202341 minSeason 4Ep. 6

Archives and Empire with Asheesh Kapur Siddique

Historians owe their livelihoods to the archives of historical material spread throughout the world. However, archives were not established as mere repositories of historical memory, but rather as tools of statecraft and empire! We talk with Asheesh Kapur Siddique, (from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, about archives and empire, and his path-breaking scholarship into 18th-century history. . Tell us what you think! Send us a text message!...

Jan 31, 202341 minSeason 4Ep. 5

Karin Wulf, The Vast American Revolution and the John Carter Brown Library

The John Carter Brown Library is one of the premier research libraries in America, with collections on the entire hemisphere. We talk with https://kariKarin Wulf, the Beatrice and Julio Mario Santo Domingo Director of the John Carter Brown Library about their extraordinary holdings, as well as her pioneering work in early American history, and her forthcoming work on genealogy and on the historical world of Esther Forbes. Tell us what you think! Send us a text message!...

Jan 24, 202334 minSeason 4Ep. 4

Dark Voyage with Christian McBurney

The American privateer Marlborough set out in 1777-1778 to disrupt British trade and enrich its crew and owners by capturing British merchantmen. The Marlborough focused on Britain's slave trade, attacking the slave-trading port at the Isle de Los off today's Guinea. This successful raid, and other attacks by American privateers on British slavers, had repercussions for the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. We talk with Christian McBurney, author of Dark Voyage: An American Privateer's War on Britain'...

Jan 17, 202334 minSeason 4Ep. 3

Our French Allies with Norman Desmarais

What did the French hope to gain by siding with the Americans in the Revolution? We talk with Norman Desmarais, Professor emeritus from Providence College, about his book America's First Ally: France in the Revolutionary War, and we hear other stories of this fraught alliance. Norm Desmarais has also translated the Gazette Francois, a newspaper the French forces published in Newport, and has written a six-volume Guide to the Revolutionary War, and Battlegrounds of Freedom, a guide to Revolutiona...

Jan 10, 202340 minSeason 4Ep. 2

William Molineux, Merchant, Smuggler, Patriot with J. L. Bell

Merchant, smuggler & patriot, William Molineux if forgotten now, but was a leading voice among the Boston Sons of Liberty. His hands were in many if not most of the protests that occurred in Boston between the 1765 Stamp Act and the protests of 1774, when he died suddenly, some think by his own hand. One historian who has not forgotten Molineux is J. L. Bell, creator of the Boston 1775 blog and author of The Road to Concord: How Four Stolen Cannons Ignited the Revolutionary War. We learn mor...

Jan 03, 202344 minSeason 4Ep. 1

Daniel Shays's Honorable Rebellion with Daniel Bullen

Shays's Rebellion--or the Regulators of Massachusetts--tested many of the precepts for which the American Revolution was fought. We talk with author Daniel Bullen , about his book, Daniel Shays' Honorable Rebellion , which tells the story of regular people banding together and keeping the peace during five months of protests, protecting their liberty and property from the speculators and financiers and speculators seeking to profit at their expense. Tell us what you think! Send us a text message...

Dec 27, 202235 minSeason 3Ep. 52

The Hessian Experience with Friederike Baer

Following the evacuation of Boston in March of 1776, London authorities knew that Britain's small British alone could not possibly conquer the American continent. King George III, also the Elector of Hanover, reached out to his German relations and other allied provinces to provide auxiliary forces to send to America. Arriving first at New York in 1776, about 30,000 German soldiers would serve in the American War for Independence. Friederike Baer, Associate Professor & Division Head of the A...

Dec 20, 202243 minSeason 3Ep. 51

The Colonists' American Revolution with Guy Chet

American colonial leaders in the 1760's and 1770's insisted that they were just asserting their rights as free-born subjects of British empire. They believed that English Constitution was the greatest source of freedom on Earth and their forefathers who came to America did not intend to separate themselves from that Constitution. In time, of course, they sought a different path. Guy Chet, Professor of History at the University of North Texas, talks with us about his latest book, The Colonists' A...

Dec 14, 202242 minSeason 3Ep. 50

Ten Crucial Days with Roger Williams

In "Ten Crucial Days" between December 25, 1776, and January 3, 1777, George Washington and his small force saved the Revolution. Roger S. Williams joins us to talk about these ten crucial days, and the programs he sponsors at Washington's Crossing Park, the Trenton Battlefield, and in Princeton. Find out about the tours and events in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and the musical, "The Crossing," offered here to high school groups who want to perform this story--or hear the music. Inspiring stori...

Dec 06, 202236 minSeason 3Ep. 49

Rex vs. Wemms: The Boston Massacre Trial

On this day, 251 years ago, we would find ourselves in the middle of a trial of 8 British Soldiers on trial for murder over the events that occurred on the night of March 5, 1770, known as the Boston Massacre. During that night, British soldiers fired into a crowd of Bostonians who had gathered on King Street and were threatening a British sentry. The resulting skirmish left 4 Bostonians killed outright and several more wounded, some mortally. This radio play was originally written by Professor ...

Dec 02, 20221 hr 45 min

Relics of the Boston Tea Party with J. L. Bell

In museums and historical societies all across the nation there are artifacts related to the American Revolution and the cause of American Independence. J.L. Bell, who maintains a terrific blog on Boston in the Revolution, tells us about vials of tea found in museums throughout New England. Did they come off the ships in December 1773? J.L. Bell is also the author of The Road To Concord: , on four stolen cannon that ignited the Revolution, and countless articles, essays, and even comics on the R...

Nov 29, 202241 minSeason 3Ep. 48

The Committees of Correspondence with Robert Allison.

The Boston Town Meeting issued a report on the state of their liberties, and other towns responded, establishing Committees of Correspondence to communicate with one another. This revolutionary step brought the towns of Massachusetts together in a common cause. All this happened 250 years ago this fall, in October and November of 1772. Professor Robert Allison (Chair, Suffolk University Department of History, Language & Global Culture) explores these crucial local committees and their impact...

Nov 22, 202238 minSeason 3Ep. 47

In Search of the Boston Tea Party Participants with Kristin Harris

The Boston Tea Party (December 16, 1773) was an event wreathed in secrecy. John Adams said he never knew any person who was involved in the destruction of the East India Company tea. Yet as time passed and the American Republic seemed secure, participants claimed, were identified or admitted to being part of the tea's destruction. In preparation for the 250th Anniversary in December 2023, The Boston Tea Party Ships and Museum is attempting to identify mark the graves of all known participants of...

Nov 15, 202241 minSeason 3Ep. 46

The Last Royal Governors of Massachusetts with Roberta DeCenzo

The 1691 Massachusetts Charter established the office of Royal Governor. The office lasted 85, until 1776, when Governor Thomas Gage left with the British forces on March 17. While Gage was the last of the Royal Governors, the actions of his two predecessors, Francis Bernard and Thomas Hutchinson did much to make the bring down the royal governorship. Roberta DeCenzo on the Last Royal Governors of Massachusetts. The Colonial Society of Massachusetts has digitized the papers of Governors Francis ...

Nov 08, 202243 minSeason 3Ep. 45

Religion and the American Revolution with Katherine Carté

The American Revolution disrupted the trans-Atlantic ties between American and British Protestants. Imperial Protestantism had helped helped to drive support for the British Empire, and the Empire seemed to Protestants on both sides of the Atlantic to be a way to propagate the faith. But the Revolution forced a recalibration of the role of religion in the lives of 18th-century citizens across the Atlantic World. Professor Katherine Cart é discusses all this with us, in a conversation about her a...

Nov 01, 202235 minSeason 3Ep. 44

African Founders with David Hackett Fischer

African Founders: How Enslaved People Expanded American Ideals , the latest work by award-winning author David Hackett Fischer, examines the interactions and intertwinings of Africans and their culture as it integrated into the European base culture that the American colonists brought from there. This majestic work illustrates how enslaved Africans and their descendants enlarged American ideas of freedom in varying ways in different regions of the early United States. Our conversation with David...

Oct 25, 202248 minSeason 3Ep. 43

Thomas Paine: To Begin the World Over Again with Ian Ruskin

Ian Ruskin, author, actor, and activist joins us to talk about his one man-show, " To Begin the World Over Again: The Life of Thomas Paine," which he will be performing at the Boston Public Library on November 1, 2, and 3! We sit down to talk about the extraordinary life of Thomas Paine, the most radical of the founding generation, who still speaks to us today. Tell us what you think! Send us a text message!...

Oct 21, 202241 minSeason 3Ep. 42

Nathanael Greene: in the Line of Splendor with novelist Salina Baker

General Nathanael Greene is one of the most important officers of Washington's inner circle from the American Revolutionary War. Rising rapidly from the officer commanding Rhode Island troops at the siege of Boston to the officer responsible for supplying the nascent American army, Greene solidified his reputation as one of Washington's most dependenable general officers during his campaign in the South. We talk with Salina Baker, award winning author of the fantasy American Revolution series, A...

Oct 18, 202237 minSeason 3Ep. 41

The Somerset Decision - 250 years later

Professor Robert Allison (Chair, Suffolk University Department of History, Language & Global Culture) discusses the June 1772 King's Bench decision by Lord Chief Justice Mansfield in the case of Somerset v. Stewart, long heralded as the first shot fired in the long history of anti-slavery jurisprudence. Who was James Somerset? What impact did this decision have on him, on the institution of slavery, and on the British empire? Tell us what you think! Send us a text message!...

Oct 11, 202237 minSeason 3Ep. 40

Feeding Washington's Army with Ricardo A. Herrera

From the dark and cold winter encampment of Valley Forge, Washington launched one of the War's riskiest campaigns: to feed and clothe his army, and prevent its soldiers from starving, dispersing, or deserting. Ricardo A. Herrera, Visiting Professor of History at the Army War College, tells us about his book, Feeding Washington's Army: Surviving the Valley Forge Winter of 1778. We hear about the campaigns of Nathanael Greene, Anthony Wayne, and Henry Lee to gather cattle, sheep, and wheat, and Jo...

Sep 27, 202238 minSeason 3Ep. 39

James Madison: America's First Politician, with Jay Cost.

Before he was a "Founding Father," James Madison was a politician. He shaped a political system to work when, as he said, "good and wise statesmen are not at the helm." Join Professor Bob Allison (Chair, Suffolk University Department of History, Language & Global Culture) talking with Jay Cost , Gerald R. Ford Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, Director of Grove City College's Institute for Faith and Freedom, author of James Madison: America's First Politician, about Madison's long...

Sep 20, 202243 minSeason 3Ep. 38

Independence Lost with Kathleen DuVal

How does our view of the Revolution change if we view it from the Gulf Coast or Mississippi River? Kathleen DuVal , Professor of History at the University of North Carolina, joins us to talk about her book, Independence Lost: Lives on the Edge of the American Revolution . We hear about Bernardo de Galvez, the Spanish governor of Louisiana, Alexander MacGillivray, the leader of the Creeks, as well as exiled Scots, Irish, and Cajuns and the African-American spy from Mobile Petit Jean, and the role...

Sep 13, 202244 minSeason 3Ep. 37

Boston's Old North Church & Historic Site

Old North Church , officially Christ Church in Boston, is the city's oldest church--built in 1723--and is still a functioning parish. It has one of the oldest church organs in the country, four seventeenth-century Belgian angels which were destined for a church in Quebec, and an eighteenth-century clock that still keeps time. It is most known for two lanterns hung in the steeple on April 18, 1775, but there is much more to the story, as we hear from Nikki Stewart, the Executive Director of the O...

Sep 07, 202241 minSeason 3Ep. 36
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