Conversations at the Washington Library

Conversations at the Washington Library is the premier podcast about George Washington and his Early American world.

https://www.georgewashingtonpodcast.com/show/conversations/

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 44m. Bisher sind 235 Folge(n) erschienen. Jede Woche gibt es eine neue Folge dieses Podcasts.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 7 days 7 hours 49 minutes

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episode 212: 212. Recruiting the Hero of Two Worlds with Mike Duncan


To kick off Season 6, we bring you the story of America’s Favorite Fighting Frenchmen. In 1777, the Marquis de Lafayette sailed from France with a commission as a major general in the Continental Army. Unlike many other European soldiers of fortune,...


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 October 6, 2021  56m
 
 

episode 213: 213. Sailing to Freedom with Dr. Timothy D. Walker


In May 1796, an enslaved woman named Ona Judge fled the presidential household in Philadelphia and escaped to freedom on a ship headed for New Hampshire. Judge’s successful flight was one of many such escapes by the sea in the 18th and 19th...


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 October 23, 2021  42m
 
 

episode 214: 214. Weaponizing Settlement in Nova Scotia with Dr. Alexandra Montgomery


Although you might not realize it, in the years before the American Revolution, Nova Scotia was all the rage. People concocted various schemes to settle it, and the British government saw it as one of the keys to its new vision of empire after the Seven Years' War. Nova Scotia has a fascinating, often troubled history...


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 November 4, 2021  46m
 
 

episode 215: Intertwined: The Enslaved Community at George Washington's Mount Vernon (Coming November 15, 2021)


Intertwined tells the story of the more than 577 people enslaved by George and Martha Washington at Mount Vernon. Told through the biographies of Sambo Anderson, Davy Gray, William Lee, Kate, Ona Judge, Nancy Carter Quander, Edmund Parker, Caroline...


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 November 10, 2021  1m
 
 

episode 215: 215. Reading Thomas Paine's Rights of Man with Dr. Frances Chiu


For most Americans, Thomas Paine is the radical Englishman, and former tax collector, who published Common Sense in early 1776. His claim that hereditary monarchy was an absurdity and that the “cause of America was in great measure the cause of all...


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 December 2, 2021  26m
 
 

episode 216: Previewing Episode 1 of Intertwined: The Enslaved Community at George Washington's Mount Vernon


On this week's show, we bring you Episode 1 of Intertwined: The Enslaved Community at George Washington's Mount Vernon. Entitled "Passages," it features the life of Sambo Anderson, who was just a boy when he was captured in West Africa, survived the...


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 November 17, 2021  42m
 
 

episode 216: 216. Digitally Deconstructing the Constitution with Dr. Nicholas Cole


When delegates assembled in Philadelphia in the Summer of 1787 to write a new Constitution, they spent months in secret writing a document they hoped would form a more perfect Union. When we talk about the convention, we often talk of the Virginia...


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 December 23, 2021  47m
 
 

episode 217: 217. Exploring Star Territory with Dr. Gordon Fraser


In the 18th and 19th centuries, North Americans looked up at the sky in wonder at the cosmos and what lay beyond earth’s atmosphere. But astronomers like Benjamin Banneker, Georgia surveyors, Cherokee storytellers, and government officials also saw...


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 January 6, 2022  50m
 
 

episode 219: 219. Negotiating Federal-State Relations with Dr. Grace Mallon


For years after the ratification of the Constitution, Americans debated how the Federal Government and the several states should relate to each other, and work together, to form a more perfect union. The success, if not the survival, of the new...


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 February 2, 2022  44m
 
 

episode 220: 220. Educating Early Americans with Drs. Mark Boonshoft and Andrew O'Shaughnessy


In eighteenth-century America,  you would’ve had little opportunity for formal schooling or an advanced education. Unless you were among the elite or at least of some means, your chances of attending a local academy or Harvard College weren’t...


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 February 18, 2022  1h3m
 
 
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