Dispatches: The Podcast of the Journal of the American Revolution
Society & Culture:History
This week our guest is JAR Contributor Matthew Reardon. Although the Treaty of Paris was being signed in 1782, the war continued in the American Colonies. Since 1776, warring partisans raided one another on small ships along the New England coastline. These small engagements have become known as "The Whaleboat Wars." For more information visit www.allthingsliberty.com.
E43: John L. Smith, Jr.: The Origins of French Fries
E42: Roberto Oscar Flores de Apodaca: Thanksgiving, Prayer, and the Common Soldier
E41: Jim Piecuch: Britain's "Female Corps"
E40: Louis Arthur Norton: The Bonhomme Richard v. The Serapis
E39: Eric Sterner: The Gnaddenhutten Massacre
E38: Frederic C. Detwiller: The Mysterious Monsr Dubuq: The Revolution's First Frenchman?
E37: Andrew Schocket: Who Mattered In Early America?
E36: John McCurdy: Quarters: The Accomodation of the British Army and the Coming of the American Revolution
E35: Gabriel Neville: The Clove Road
E34: Mark Edward Lender: Cabal: The Plot Against General Washington
E33: James Fichter: The Tea that Survived the Boston Tea Party
E32: Gene Procknow: The Parallel Lives of Benedict Arnold and James Wemyss
E31: Jason Yonce: The Annapolis Convention
E30: John Buchanan: The Road to Charleston
E29: Joseph E. Wroblewski: The Queen's Rangers
E28: Rick Atkinson: The British Are Coming: The War for America, Lexington to Princeton
E27: JL Bell: Myths and Legends of the Declaration of Independence
E26: Andrew Waters: Daniel Morgan vs. Charles Cornwallis in the Carolinas
E25: Tristan J. New: Early Efforts to Make Peace with Britain
E24: John L. Smith, Jr.: The Founding Fathers at Notre-Dame de Paris
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