Revolution 250 Podcast Podcast Por Robert Allison arte de portada

Revolution 250 Podcast

Revolution 250 Podcast

De: Robert Allison
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Revolution 250 is a consortium of organizations in New England planning commemorations of the American Revolution's 250th anniversary. https://revolution250.org/Through this podcast you will meet many of the people involved in these commemorations, and learn about the people who brought about the Revolution--which began here. To support Revolution 250, visit https://www.masshist.org/rev250Theme Music: "Road to Boston" fifes: Doug Quigley, Peter Emerick; Drums: Dave Emerick© 2026 Revolution 250 Podcast Mundial
Episodios
  • American Ancestors on the American Revolution
    Mar 31 2026

    Genealogists David Allen Lambert and Melanie McComb of American Ancestors talk about how family history reshapes our understanding of the American Revolution. Drawing on the vast collections and scholarship of one of the nation’s oldest genealogical institutions, Lambert and McComb explore how military records, pension files, and local archives reveal stories far beyond famous names—illuminating the lives of women, immigrants, and Patriots of color whose contributions sustained the Revolutionary cause. From the remarkable longevity of Revolutionary War widows to the quiet resilience of families on the home front, the episode highlights how genealogy transforms “names and dates” into vivid human stories. Together, they make a compelling case that uncovering the past isabout rediscovering the ordinary people whose choices shaped a Revolution—and whose descendants still carry that legacy forward.

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    42 m
  • Rage and the Republic with Jonathan Turley
    Mar 24 2026

    Most revolutions end in failure. If they succeed in toppling the bad old regime, they often create a new one that is worse. "Like Saturn," a French journalist observed in the early 1790s, "the Revolution devours its children." Why was the American Revolution different? Legal scholar and political analyst Jonathan Turley explores this question in his new book, Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution. How did the Americans avoid the horrors other Revolutions? In this conversation we discuss the American Revolution, the history that American revolutionaries carried with them and informed their world, and the role of firebrands like Thomas Paine and Robespierre, and political theorists James Wilson and James Madison.

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    36 m
  • The Maddest Idea: Creating a Navy with B. J. Armstrong
    Mar 17 2026

    On this episode of the Revolution 250 Podcast, host Professor Robert Allison welcomes Captain B.J. Armstrong, a 27-year officer in the United States Navy, Associate Professor of War Studies and Naval History at the U.S. Naval Academy, and Director of the Naval Academy Museum.

    BJ Armstrong's books include Small Boats and Daring Men, about irregular warfare in the Revolution. HIs regular series of blog-posts, "The Maddest Idea," explores the development of the Continental and the United States Navy.

    Their conversation explores one of the most daring and often overlooked decisions of the American Revolution: the creation of an American navy. Armstrong discusses the “maddest idea” debated by the Continental Congress in 1775, when a fledgling rebellion challenged the world’s most powerful maritime empire by taking to the sea. From small-boat raids and irregular warfare to the intellectual legacy of naval strategist Alfred Thayer Mahan, the discussion connects the Revolution’s naval origins to broader questions of maritime strategy and national power.

    Together, Allison and Armstrong examine how the Revolutionary generation imagined sea power, why maritime history is central to understanding the struggle for independence, and what the early American Navy can still teach us today.

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    40 m
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