Dispatches: The Podcast of the Journal of the American Revolution
Society & Culture:History
This week our guest is Cho-Chien Feng. While the war raged along the eastern seaboard, for the families and communities of upstate New York it devolved into a brutal civil war. Feng discusses how these political fissures first appeared and what they meant to the people involved. For more information visit www.allthingsliberty.com.
E54: John Rees: They Were Good Soldiers: African Americans Serving in the Continental Army, 1775-1783
E53: Tom Shachtman: Founding Fortunes
Michael Cecere: Virginia’s Eighteen Months Men
E51: Jeffrey D. Simon: The Sons of Liberty and Mob Terror
E50: Dean Caivano: Resistance Against Tyranny
E49: William H.J. Manthorpe, Jr.: The Lewes Lighthouse Legend
E48: David Head: The Prelude to the Newburgh Conspiracy
E47: Steven Neill: The British East India Company and the American Revolution
E46: Don N. Hagist: Martha Bradley and Eighteenth-Century Cookery
E45: Alexander Cain: Massachusetts Privateers During the Siege of Boston
E44: Ray Raphael: The Framers and Impeachment
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
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
American Revolution Podcast
Revolutions
Ben Franklin’s World
Key Battles of the Revolutionary War
Patriot Lessons: American History and Civics (Constitution, Declaration of Independence, etc.)