Dispatches: The Podcast of the Journal of the American Revolution
Society & Culture:History
This week our guests are JAR contributors Michael C. Harris and Gary Ecelbarger. While Washington’s Army is typically viewed as under strength, new research shows that his army was far larger than first realized. For more information visit www.allthingsliberty.com.
E73: Ken Shumate: The Molasses Act of 1733
E72: Christian M. McBurney: General Charles Lee Imposes an Oath of Allegiance
E71: Geoff Smock: The Enlightened Views of Thomas Jefferson
E70: Keith Muchowski: Rufus King: Forgotten Founder
E69: Andrew Waters: The Quaker and the Gamecock: Nathanael Greene, Thomas Sumter, and the Revolutionary War for the Soul of the South
E68: Lindsay M. Chervinsky: The Cabinet: George Washington and the Creation of an American Institution
E67: Matthew Reardon: The Whaleboat Wars on the Connecticut River
E66: George Kotlik: The British Invasion of the Bahamas
E65: Stephen John Katzberg: Mapping the Battle of Eutaw Springs
E64: Eric Sterner: The Siege of Fort Henry
E63: Patrick Naughton: Informational Control and the Battles of Lexington and Concord.
E62: Andrew A. Zellers-Frederick: John Sullivan and the Occupation of Easton
E61: Justin McHenry: Morgan v. Shippen and the Fate of the Continental Medical Department
E60: Brian Patrick O’Malley: Philadelphia’s Yellow Fever Epidemic
E59: Patrick H. Hannum: Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation
E58: Kevin A. Conn: The Lenape History of the American Revolution
E57: Katie Turner Getty: Control of Disease in the Revolutionary Era
E56: Matthew Skic: The Museum of the American Revolution
E55: Douglas R. Dorney, Jr.: Captain John De Treville: Continental Officer and British Spy
E54: John Rees: They Were Good Soldiers: African Americans Serving in the Continental Army, 1775-1783
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