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.
E131: John A. Ruddiman: James Monroe’s Revolution
E130: Jordan Baker: The Cherokee-American War
E129: James D.R. Philips: Two Revolutions and the Constitution
E128: Edna Gabler: The Silence of Slavery in Revolutionary War Art
E127:Lafayette's Plan to Invade Ireland
E126: Norman Desmarais: The Gazette Francoise
E125: Bill Bleyer: George Washington’s Culper Spy Ring
E124: Haimo Li: Article 1, Section 9, Clause 3 of the Constitution
E123: John DeLee: Shifting Indian Policy During the Articles of Confederation Era
E122: George Kotlik: Following William Bartram’s Footsteps in Florida
E121: Travis Copeland: The Capture of North Carolina Governor Thomas Burke
E120: Robert N. Fanelli: A Fatal Dispute Among the Guards
E119: David P. Ervin: The Continental Army on the Upper Ohio
E118: Mike Matheny: How Paperwork Saved the Continental Army
E117: Charles Dewey: Amicus Reipublicae: Abraham Bancker, Friend of the Republic
E116: Philip D. Weaver: New York’s First Revolutionary Captain
E115: Eric Sterner: John Rutledge of South Carolina
E114: William V. Wenger: Foreign Assistance to America’sRevolutionary War
E113: James P. Sieradzki: The New Jersey Shop License Law of 1780
E112:Jonathan Bayer: Fake News of the Surrender of Quebec
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.)