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.
E232: Jane Strachan: Margaret Montcrieffe Coghlan: The Making of Her Memoirs
E231: Michael Cecere: United for Independence: The American Revolution in the Middle Colonies, 1775-1776
E230: Norman E. Donaghue II: Prisoners of Congress: Philadelphia’s Quakers in Exile, 1777-1778
E229: Christian McBurney: Smallpox Threatens a Privateer at Sea
E228: William H.J. Manthorpe, Jr.: Father and Son: Patriots Who Gave Their All
E227: Norman Desmarais: A Frog Feast
E226: Clark vs. Livingston: Pettiness, Paper Money, and Elections
E225: Victor J. DiSanto: The Fidelity Medallion
E224: Benjamin George: George Washington’s Information War
E223: Colin Zimmerman: The Continental Encampment in Bucks County, December 1776
E222: Al Dickenson: A Visit to the Battle of Fallen Timbers Monument
E221: Ray Raphael: Was the Declaration of Independence Signed on July 4? How Memory Plays Tricks with History
E220: Dispatches: The Podcast of the Journal of the American Revolution
E219: Adam E. Zielinski: James Forten, Revolutionary: Forgotten No More
E218: George Kotlik: East Florida in the Revolutionary Era, 1763-1785
E217: Douglas R. Dorney, Jr.: Lord Cornwallis: Defender of American and British Liberty?
E216: David Price: Eutaw Springs and the Ambiguity of Victory
E215: Alexandra I. Griffeth: Hanover County and Patrick Henry
E214: Shawn David McGhee: George Washington’s ”Rules of Civility”: An Early American Mystery
E213: Eric Sterner: Engaging the Glasgow
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