Episodios

  • S6E3: North Carolina's Great American Treasures: Fourth House
    Mar 31 2026

    At the heart of the 1766 Moravian settlement of Salem sat a residential home that was not unlike its neighbors. However, over the past 250 years, Fourth House, as it is known, has become a torch bearer for the residential way of life in the historical community. Now part of Old Salem's living history site, Fourth House helps tell the story of a colonial life, the vestiges of which can still be seen in the surrounding area today.

    As part of our ongoing podcast series, "Burgwin-Wright Presents... North Carolina's Great American Treasures," we are visiting the history and the legacy of Fourth House and its place among the properties owned by The National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of North Carolina. This special series will feature a new episode each month through 2026, in honor of America's 250th!

    This month's guest is Johanna Brown, Chief Curator and Director of Collections, Archaeology and Research at Old Salem Museums and Gardens in Winston-Salem.

    For more information about the Old Salem Museums and Gardens, visit OldSalem.org. You can also learn more about the Burgwin-Wright House at BurgwinWrightHouse.com.

    Support the podcast and donate!: https://www.burgwinwrighthouse.com/donate1

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    37 m
  • S7E1: Outlander in the Cape Fear: A Conversation with Diana Gabaldon
    Mar 6 2026

    After years of talking about "Outlander's" impact on North Carolina and the Cape Fear region, we are thrilled to welcome the author and architect of the series herself, Diana Gabaldon, to the podcast! During this conversation, Diana shares when she first learned that North Carolina would be so important to her Scottish story, her writing process, and what it is like to be approaching the end of her series with a 10th and final book.

    As the "Outlander" TV series begins its own final season on Starz, we are so grateful to Diana for joining us to celebrate the intertwined histories of her books and our region.

    Learn more about everything Diana is doing at her website, DianaGabaldon.com. And for more information about the Burgwin-Wright House and to learn how to support the house, visit BurgwinWrightHouse.com.

    Support the podcast and donate!: https://www.burgwinwrighthouse.com/donate1

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    34 m
  • S6E2: North Carolina's Great American Treasures: Joel Lane Museum House
    Feb 27 2026

    In the heart of Raleigh stands the Joel Lane Museum House, a remnant of the colonial era before the state, the county or the city were formed. The stories of Joel Lane, his family and those enslaved on his plantation tell of a pivotal moment in American history, and the house offers incredible insight into life at the dawn of North Carolina.

    As part of our ongoing podcast series, "Burgwin-Wright Presents... North Carolina's Great American Treasures," we are visiting the history and the legacy of the Joel Lane House and its place among the properties owned by The National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of North Carolina. This special series will feature a new episode each month through 2026, in honor of America's 250th!

    This month's guest is Joel Lane Museum House director Lanie Hubbard, who joins to talk about using Joel Lane's history, as well as those of his family and enslaved workers, to share early American history, as well as the role of the Dames in saving it nearly a century ago.

    For more information about the Joel Lane Museum House, visit JoelLane.org. You can also learn more about the Burgwin-Wright House at BurgwinWrightHouse.com.

    Support the podcast and donate!: https://www.burgwinwrighthouse.com/donate1

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    41 m
  • S6E1: North Carolina's Great American Treasures: Burgwin-Wright House
    Jan 30 2026

    In celebration of America's 250th birthday, the "Burgwin-Wright Presents..." podcast is honoring North Carolina's Great American Treasures, the historic properties saved and supported by The National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of North Carolina.

    Each month in 2026, the podcast will visit one of these properties to tell its history and explore how the North Carolina Dames became involved in preserving its legacy for future generations. To begin this special series, we are starting at home –– or rather the Dames' headquarters –– with a look at the 20th century history of the Burgwin-Wright House and how the Dames defied the odds to save it from demolition on the brink of World War II.

    Our returning special guest Christine Lamberton, the museum director for the Burgwin-Wright House and Gardens, shares why the Dames made it their mission to rescue the house and restore it to its colonial glory, and how they faced war, the Great Depression and big corporations to do it.

    For more information about the Burgwin-Wright House and to learn how to support the house, visit BurgwinWrightHouse.com.

    Support the podcast and donate!: https://www.burgwinwrighthouse.com/donate1

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    57 m
  • S5E4: Outlander in the Cape Fear: Spies in the Revolution
    Jan 17 2025

    Wars were fought on the battlefield, but they were won in the shadows. Spies and counterintelligence efforts on both sides of the American Revolution were a key component of the war, and led to seismic shifts in power as America fought for its independence.

    Joining the show to talk about the life and legacies of colonial spies is Cheney J. Schopieray, Curator of Manuscripts for the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan, which is home to the Sir Henry Clinton Collection.

    Additional resources mentioned in the episode:

    1. For more information about the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan or to connect with our guest, visit https://clements.umich.edu.

    2. To see the "Spy Letters of the American Revolution" online exhibit, visit https://clements.umich.edu/exhibit/spy-letters-of-the-american-revolution/

    3. For a look at the original July 17, 1777 "quill pen" letter from British Army Commander-in-Chief William Howe to John Burgoyne, featured in "Outlander" Season 7, visit https://clements.umich.edu/exhibit/spy-letters-of-the-american-revolution/stories-of-spies/howe-goes-his-own-way/

    For more information about the Burgwin-Wright House and to learn how to support the house, visit BurgwinWrightHouse.com.

    Cover art design by Rachel Ross.

    Support the podcast and donate!: https://www.burgwinwrighthouse.com/donate1

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    45 m
  • S5E3: Outlander in the Cape Fear: Two Teeth and A Musket
    Dec 13 2024

    As the "Outlander" story moves around the American Colonies during the Revolutionary War, we take a moment to return to the homefront to talk about what Wilmington would have looked like during the war. The town's port made it an invaluable commodity during the conflict, but how did its citizens fare as fighting raged on? What impact did the revolution have on Wilmington's ascension as a jewel in North Carolina's crown?

    Joining the episode is Jack E. Fryar, a historian and author of the new book, "When the British Came: Revolution in the Cape Fear, 1765-1782." Fryar is the publisher behind Dram Tree Books, the extensive local history catalogue for which can be found at DramTreeBooks.com.

    For more information about the Burgwin-Wright House and to learn how to support the house, visit BurgwinWrightHouse.com.

    Cover art design by Rachel Ross.

    Support the podcast and donate!: https://www.burgwinwrighthouse.com/donate1

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    37 m
  • S5E2: Outlander in the Cape Fear: Age of the Jacobites
    Nov 29 2024

    One of the most formative events in the "Outlander" story happens far from the Cape Fear region back in Scotland when thousands took up arms against the British throne in the Jacobite Rising of 1745. But what brought Scotland to war with its monarch? What did it mean for the average Scot, and how did it impact the American Revolution decades later?

    This episode, we are joined by Professor Murray Pittock, a historian and author with the University of Glasgow in Scotland to talk about the age of the Jacobites and how that uprising left scars that would be brought to the American Colonies on the eve of its own war.

    For more information about the Burgwin-Wright House and to learn how to support the house, visit BurgwinWrightHouse.com. For more information on Murray Pittock and his published works, you can find him at https://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/critical/staff/murraypittock/.

    Cover art design by Rachel Ross.

    Support the podcast and donate!: https://www.burgwinwrighthouse.com/donate1

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    48 m
  • S5E1: Outlander in the Cape Fear: Medicine in the Time of War
    Nov 22 2024

    Return to the world of “Outlander” with a deep dive into the realities and risks of battlefield medicine. As the series moves through the Revolutionary War, historical medicine interpreter Charles Brett discusses how physicians, nurses and healers were the saving grace of those wounded in battle or ravaged by the diseases that plagued regiments from battle to battle.

    For more information about the Burgwin-Wright House and to learn how to support the house, visit BurgwinWrightHouse.com.

    Cover art design by Rachel Ross.

    Support the podcast and donate!: https://www.burgwinwrighthouse.com/donate1

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Más Menos
    57 m