How did the people of early America experience and feel about winter?
Thomas Wickman, an Associate Professor of History and American Studies at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut and author of Snowshoe Country: An Environmental and Cultural Winter in the Early American Northeast, joins us to investigate how Native Americans and early Americans experienced and felt about winter during the 17th and early 18th centuries.
Show Notes: https://www.benfranklinsworld.com/267
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337 Early America's Trade with China
336 Surviving the Southampton Rebellion
335 The Jewish World of Alexander Hamilton
334 Missions & Mission Building in New Spain
333 Experiences of Revolution: Disruptions in Yorktown
332 Experiences of Revolution: Occupied Philadelphia
331 The Discovery of the Williamsburg Bray School
330 Loyalism in the British Atlantic World
329 Freemasonry in Early America
328 Free People of Color in Early America
327 Benjamin Franklin: A Film by Ken Burns
326 The Greek Revolution in Early America
325 Everyday People of the American Revolution
324 New Netherland and Slavery
323 American Expansion and the Political Economy of Plunder
322 Running from Bondage in Revolutionary America
321 BFW Team Favorite: Whose Fourth of July?
320 Benjamin Franklin's London House
319 Cuba: An Early American History
Bonus: Colonial Ste. Geneviéve, Missouri
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