-
(1772) Violin, unaltered baroque form, England or Scotland, c 1720.
Nicolini Cosimi (fl. 1690-1705), Prelude in A major from Select Preludes and Voluntaries for the Violin ... by all the Greatest Masters in Europe for that Instrument (London: J. Walsh and J. Hare, 1705), played by Christopher Field. Lent by Mrs E. Pearce.
published: 26 Oct 2010
-
Unraveling: Black Indigeneity in America
This digital resource examines historical intersections between African and Native American peoples, particularly in relation to New Haven and Yale University. View 'Sections' below:
Section Timecodes:
0:00 - Introduction
4:26 - Native Americans in Slavery
5:15 - Slavery in Spanish Colonies
6:23 - Slavery in Portuguese Colonies
8:00 - Slavery in French Colonies
9:48 - Slavery in British Colonies
10:50 - The Pequot War
12:34 - New Haven Colony
13:51 - Southern Slave Trade
15:11 - Racial Etymology
19:09 - Yale and the Indian Slave Trades
21:15 - George Berkeley's Bermuda Scheme
23:25 - Johnathan Edwards and Stockbridge Indian Mission
24:26 - John Sergeant
25:40 - Timothy Woodbridge
26:56 - Arson of Stockbridge Indian Mission
27:54 - Escaped Afro-Indigenous Captives
28:05 - Methotaskee/Eliz...
published: 02 Mar 2023
-
Naval History | Keith Stokes: Slave Trade in America
Black History Month
"Newport, R.I. as a Center for the Slave Trade in America"
Feb. 15, 2012
Director of the Rhode Island Economic Development Corp. and noted historian Keith Stokes gave a lecture to a full house in the Spruance Auditorium at the U.S. Naval War College on Feb. 15. In this lecture, Stokes talks about the Rhode Island Slave Trade during the 17th and 18th centuries. The lecture was organized by the Naval Station Newport's Diversity Committee. During the 17th and 18th centuries, one of three Newport residents were slaves that were brought over from Ghana. Stokes explained that while slaves in Rhode Island were treated vastly different than those who worked on southern plantations, they were still slaves.
*****
Disclaimer: The views expressed are the speaker's own an...
published: 16 Feb 2012
-
10 American Founding Myths
Perhaps the most mythologized event in US history is our founding. Myths lend identity, so of course the beginning of our history is the greatest target. Of course, that's a recipe for misconceptions. The founding of this Republic is not only ripe for misinformation, but outright disinformation, as everyone wants to see themselves in the founders especially at the first of their political enemies. But it's time to dispel ten of the most common myths.
Errata: Washington first acknowledged the name "town-destroyer" in 1755 b/c of his great-grandfather and Charles Brant later applied the name to the Sullivan Expedition (thx TheAlexSchmidt)
------------------------------------------------------------
*Bibliography*
David Armitage, “The Declaration of Independence and International Law,” ...
published: 29 Jun 2023
-
"God's Little Acre": Life, Death, Work, and Worship in the African Heritage Community of Newport, RI
On March 24, 2021, Historic New England invited public historian Keith W. Stokes to speak about a historically noteworthy burying ground in Rhode Island that the African heritage community commonly called “God’s Little Acre.” Learn about how Newport was the largest and most active slave port in British North America and about the African people who lived, worked, worshiped, and eventually were buried in Colonial Newport in God’s Little Acre.
published: 08 Apr 2021
-
The Rise of the U.S Economy (Documentary)
Entire Economic History of USA Summarized - Documentary - 1620-2024
From the Thirteen Colonies to the largest economic superpower in the world. Booms, depressions, wars, inventions, critical characters all reveal the greatest economic success story of all time.
Thank you for watching the video. Please like and subscribe, and leave feedback in the comments below. Anything is appreciated!
Timestamps:
0:00 A Land of Opportunity (1620-1700)
1:54 Colonial Beginnings (1700-1776)
11:01 Birth of a Nation (1776-1860)
28:28 Civil War & Industrial Surge (1860-1914)
38:43 Boom to Bust (1914-1950)
50:29 Cold War Prosperity (1950-1980)
1:00:29 Reaganomics & Tech Revolution (1980-2000)
1:07:40 21st Century Challenges (2000-Present)
published: 08 Feb 2024
-
Election of 1800
A contentious election is nothing new in American history. Yet the presidential election of 1800—pitting incumbent John Adams against Thomas Jefferson—still stands out as one of the most controversial. This hotly contested race introduced new levels of partisanship and ushered in significant political realignment, but it also marked the first peaceful transfer of power in the young United States.
Join us on Tuesday, November 2, at 1:00 p.m. for an encore presentation of our Election of 1800 livestream with Thomas Jefferson, interpreted by Bill Barker, and John Adams, interpreted by Steve Holloway.
published: 02 Nov 2021
-
Confederacy Series #1 - The History of "White" with Edward Ingebretsen
Confederacy Series #1 - The History of "White" - Livestream
The first time the word 'white' was used as a descriptor of a person was, likely 1613. This program sorts out the prehistory of "race" as it developed through European religious institutions, colonial practices and commercial exploitation. "White" is first found in Virginia law in the 1690s. And, why, e.g. Western global aesthetics still privilege a politics of colorism. It wasn't until 1940 that the rules were changed to allow women of color to enter the Miss America pageant. Before that, the official rules stated that contestants had to be "of good health and of the white race."
__________________________
Presenter: Edward J. Ingebretsen, Ph.D
Ingebretsen holds advanced degrees in Theology, Philosophy and Education, and a P...
published: 10 Aug 2022
-
Bridge the Atlantic with the Iron and Steel Heritage Partnership - April 21, 2021 (ZOOM meeting)
Bridging the Atlantic was a presentation highlighting the history, connection, and interpretation of Iron Bridge Gorge, a World Heritage Site in Shropshire, England and multiple iron sites in southeastern Pennsylvania, including Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site. The presentation featured Gillian Crumpton and Georgina Grant from Iron Bridge Gorge and David Blackburn, former site director at Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site and currently with Landis Valley Village and Farm Museum. The presentation was organized by the Iron and Steel Heritage Partnership, which was formed to attract visitors to and educate residents about sites associated with iron and steel history in southeastern Pennsylvania. This region boats the longest history with and connection to the iron and steel indu...
published: 22 Apr 2021
-
The First Great Awakening (Part 1)
This lecture is a three-part slideshow presentation with narration by David H. Warren.
In part one, he mentions four great awakenings in the history of this country, focusing primarily on the first which occurred between 1730-1760, when the 13 colonies were still under British rule. This awakening has to do with a renewed interest toward religion and spiritual thinking. He also discusses reasons why this took place here in America.
published: 09 Jul 2020
1:46
(1772) Violin, unaltered baroque form, England or Scotland, c 1720.
Nicolini Cosimi (fl. 1690-1705), Prelude in A major from Select Preludes and Voluntaries for the Violin ... by all the Greatest Masters in Europe for that Instr...
Nicolini Cosimi (fl. 1690-1705), Prelude in A major from Select Preludes and Voluntaries for the Violin ... by all the Greatest Masters in Europe for that Instrument (London: J. Walsh and J. Hare, 1705), played by Christopher Field. Lent by Mrs E. Pearce.
https://wn.com/(1772)_Violin,_Unaltered_Baroque_Form,_England_Or_Scotland,_C_1720.
Nicolini Cosimi (fl. 1690-1705), Prelude in A major from Select Preludes and Voluntaries for the Violin ... by all the Greatest Masters in Europe for that Instrument (London: J. Walsh and J. Hare, 1705), played by Christopher Field. Lent by Mrs E. Pearce.
- published: 26 Oct 2010
- views: 1391
1:40:10
Unraveling: Black Indigeneity in America
This digital resource examines historical intersections between African and Native American peoples, particularly in relation to New Haven and Yale University. ...
This digital resource examines historical intersections between African and Native American peoples, particularly in relation to New Haven and Yale University. View 'Sections' below:
Section Timecodes:
0:00 - Introduction
4:26 - Native Americans in Slavery
5:15 - Slavery in Spanish Colonies
6:23 - Slavery in Portuguese Colonies
8:00 - Slavery in French Colonies
9:48 - Slavery in British Colonies
10:50 - The Pequot War
12:34 - New Haven Colony
13:51 - Southern Slave Trade
15:11 - Racial Etymology
19:09 - Yale and the Indian Slave Trades
21:15 - George Berkeley's Bermuda Scheme
23:25 - Johnathan Edwards and Stockbridge Indian Mission
24:26 - John Sergeant
25:40 - Timothy Woodbridge
26:56 - Arson of Stockbridge Indian Mission
27:54 - Escaped Afro-Indigenous Captives
28:05 - Methotaskee/Elizabeth (Shawnee)
29:27 - Crispus Attucks (Wampanoag)
30:19 - Native American Whaling
31:52 - Slavery and Kidnapping in California
34:38 - Afro-Indigenous Suits for Freedom
42:39 - Pursuit of Representation
42:55 - Captain Paul Cuffe (Wampanoag)
47:48 - Cuffe-Moses Family
49:30 - Afro-Indigenous Shipbuilding
52:02 - Cuffe's New Haven
52:32 - Ezra Stiles
55:44 - Cuffe in Sierra Leone
57:00 - Timothy Dwight IV
58:12 - James Fenimore Cooper
1:00:00 - Antebellum New Haven
1:01:30 - The Amistad
1:02:51 - Civil War
1:03:06 - Shawnee Indian Mission
1:05:16 - Abolitionist British Honduras Plan
1:06:04 - Confederates in Central America and the Caribbean
1:09:09 - Political Cartoons from Harper's Weekly
1:09:50 - Ho-tul-ko-micco/Silas Jefferson (Muscogee)
1:10:52 - Tribal Dissolution of Freedmen
1:11:42 - Five Civilized Tribes Act
1:14:47 - Census Reorganization
1:15:55 - John Calhoun and Joseph Underwood
1:17:56 - The "One-Drop Rule"
1:21:16 - Hochschild Thesis
1:22:42 - Francis Amasa Walker
1:23:35 - Walter Plecker
1:25:02 - Pencil and Paper Genocide
1:25:57 - Census Case Study
1:26:37 - Cadiz, Kentucky
1:28:52 - Sundown Towns
1:29:14 - Nearby Slave Narratives
1:30:39 - Ernest Baker
1:34:14 - Community Resources
1:39:24 - Works Cited/Appendix
https://wn.com/Unraveling_Black_Indigeneity_In_America
This digital resource examines historical intersections between African and Native American peoples, particularly in relation to New Haven and Yale University. View 'Sections' below:
Section Timecodes:
0:00 - Introduction
4:26 - Native Americans in Slavery
5:15 - Slavery in Spanish Colonies
6:23 - Slavery in Portuguese Colonies
8:00 - Slavery in French Colonies
9:48 - Slavery in British Colonies
10:50 - The Pequot War
12:34 - New Haven Colony
13:51 - Southern Slave Trade
15:11 - Racial Etymology
19:09 - Yale and the Indian Slave Trades
21:15 - George Berkeley's Bermuda Scheme
23:25 - Johnathan Edwards and Stockbridge Indian Mission
24:26 - John Sergeant
25:40 - Timothy Woodbridge
26:56 - Arson of Stockbridge Indian Mission
27:54 - Escaped Afro-Indigenous Captives
28:05 - Methotaskee/Elizabeth (Shawnee)
29:27 - Crispus Attucks (Wampanoag)
30:19 - Native American Whaling
31:52 - Slavery and Kidnapping in California
34:38 - Afro-Indigenous Suits for Freedom
42:39 - Pursuit of Representation
42:55 - Captain Paul Cuffe (Wampanoag)
47:48 - Cuffe-Moses Family
49:30 - Afro-Indigenous Shipbuilding
52:02 - Cuffe's New Haven
52:32 - Ezra Stiles
55:44 - Cuffe in Sierra Leone
57:00 - Timothy Dwight IV
58:12 - James Fenimore Cooper
1:00:00 - Antebellum New Haven
1:01:30 - The Amistad
1:02:51 - Civil War
1:03:06 - Shawnee Indian Mission
1:05:16 - Abolitionist British Honduras Plan
1:06:04 - Confederates in Central America and the Caribbean
1:09:09 - Political Cartoons from Harper's Weekly
1:09:50 - Ho-tul-ko-micco/Silas Jefferson (Muscogee)
1:10:52 - Tribal Dissolution of Freedmen
1:11:42 - Five Civilized Tribes Act
1:14:47 - Census Reorganization
1:15:55 - John Calhoun and Joseph Underwood
1:17:56 - The "One-Drop Rule"
1:21:16 - Hochschild Thesis
1:22:42 - Francis Amasa Walker
1:23:35 - Walter Plecker
1:25:02 - Pencil and Paper Genocide
1:25:57 - Census Case Study
1:26:37 - Cadiz, Kentucky
1:28:52 - Sundown Towns
1:29:14 - Nearby Slave Narratives
1:30:39 - Ernest Baker
1:34:14 - Community Resources
1:39:24 - Works Cited/Appendix
- published: 02 Mar 2023
- views: 59796
1:15:26
Naval History | Keith Stokes: Slave Trade in America
Black History Month
"Newport, R.I. as a Center for the Slave Trade in America"
Feb. 15, 2012
Director of the Rhode Island Economic Development Corp. and no...
Black History Month
"Newport, R.I. as a Center for the Slave Trade in America"
Feb. 15, 2012
Director of the Rhode Island Economic Development Corp. and noted historian Keith Stokes gave a lecture to a full house in the Spruance Auditorium at the U.S. Naval War College on Feb. 15. In this lecture, Stokes talks about the Rhode Island Slave Trade during the 17th and 18th centuries. The lecture was organized by the Naval Station Newport's Diversity Committee. During the 17th and 18th centuries, one of three Newport residents were slaves that were brought over from Ghana. Stokes explained that while slaves in Rhode Island were treated vastly different than those who worked on southern plantations, they were still slaves.
*****
Disclaimer: The views expressed are the speaker's own and may not necessarily reflect the views of the Naval War College, the Department of the Navy, the Department of Defense, or any other branch or agency of the U.S. Government.
https://wn.com/Naval_History_|_Keith_Stokes_Slave_Trade_In_America
Black History Month
"Newport, R.I. as a Center for the Slave Trade in America"
Feb. 15, 2012
Director of the Rhode Island Economic Development Corp. and noted historian Keith Stokes gave a lecture to a full house in the Spruance Auditorium at the U.S. Naval War College on Feb. 15. In this lecture, Stokes talks about the Rhode Island Slave Trade during the 17th and 18th centuries. The lecture was organized by the Naval Station Newport's Diversity Committee. During the 17th and 18th centuries, one of three Newport residents were slaves that were brought over from Ghana. Stokes explained that while slaves in Rhode Island were treated vastly different than those who worked on southern plantations, they were still slaves.
*****
Disclaimer: The views expressed are the speaker's own and may not necessarily reflect the views of the Naval War College, the Department of the Navy, the Department of Defense, or any other branch or agency of the U.S. Government.
- published: 16 Feb 2012
- views: 4899
30:29
10 American Founding Myths
Perhaps the most mythologized event in US history is our founding. Myths lend identity, so of course the beginning of our history is the greatest target. Of c...
Perhaps the most mythologized event in US history is our founding. Myths lend identity, so of course the beginning of our history is the greatest target. Of course, that's a recipe for misconceptions. The founding of this Republic is not only ripe for misinformation, but outright disinformation, as everyone wants to see themselves in the founders especially at the first of their political enemies. But it's time to dispel ten of the most common myths.
Errata: Washington first acknowledged the name "town-destroyer" in 1755 b/c of his great-grandfather and Charles Brant later applied the name to the Sullivan Expedition (thx TheAlexSchmidt)
------------------------------------------------------------
*Bibliography*
David Armitage, “The Declaration of Independence and International Law,” _William and Mary Quarterly_ 59 (January 2002): 39-64. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3491637
Bernard Bailyn, _The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution_ (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2017). https://amzn.to/3SSu5Bp
Steven K. Green, _Inventing a Christian America: The Myth of the Religious Founding_ (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015). https://amzn.to/38DvnxC
Michael D. Hattem, “The Historiography of the American Revolution,” _Journal of the American Revolution_ (27 August 2013). https://allthingsliberty.com/2013/08/historiography-of-american-revolution/
Gwenda Morgan, _The Debate on the American Revolution_ (Manchester, N.York: Manchester University Press, 2007). https://amzn.to/38Bn7hW
Andrew M. Schocket, _Fighting over the Founders: How We Remember the American Revolution_ (New York: New York University Press, 2015). https://amzn.to/2NQV7b3
_A Companion to the American Revolution,_ eds. Jack P. Greene and J.R. Pole (New York: Blackwell Publishers, 2000). https://amzn.to/2VMs4s0
_Myth America: Historians Take On the Biggest Legends and Lies About Our Past,_ edited by Kevin M. Kruse and Julian E. Zelizer (New York: Basic Books, 2022). https://amzn.to/3J5XsNP
------------------------------------------------------------
Connected videos
• 3:18 unitarians: https://youtu.be/5B8vgdS8ikU
• 4:45 2nd great awakening: https://youtu.be/0AwHLRqX3Qk
• 9:07 England vs. France: https://youtu.be/7HZTEmflKj4
• 9:07 Britain vs. France: https://youtu.be/2it5h9e41Xo
• 13:11 Lost cause myth: https://youtu.be/5EOhXF5lNgQ
• 13:41 Nationalism: https://youtu.be/UGXffvDj_E8
• 17:40 How revolutionary? https://youtu.be/LRdmx_Y40yw
• 19:11 US influence on French Revolution: https://youtu.be/k6FmJwOJ1rg
• 24:01 Sectional Crisis lecture: https://youtu.be/QEnYk2xgEIo
• 27:54 Neoliberalism: https://youtu.be/kBp69R_K1a0
------------------------------------------------------------
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=CynicalCypher88
Support the channel through PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/CynicalHistorian
or by purchasing MERCH: https://cynical-historian-shop.fourthwall.com/
LET'S CONNECT:
Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/cynicalhistorian
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cynicalcypher88
Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/cynicalhistorian.bsky.social
Threads: https://www.threads.net/@cynicalhistorian
Discord: https://discord.gg/Ukthk4U
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cynical_History
The misconceptions and chapters:
0:00 Introduction
1:07 Founders wanted Judeo-Christian values
5:37 Founders were fully original thinkers
7:23 Our government/revolution began in 1776
9:40 Slavery drove the Revolution
13:17 Independence birthed a modern nation
17:15 It was a conservative revolution
19:23 The constitution is flawless
21:02 Founders were like-minded men of the people
23:37 Patriots rebelled primarily because of taxes
27:16 Liberty means small government
29:58 Outtro
https://wn.com/10_American_Founding_Myths
Perhaps the most mythologized event in US history is our founding. Myths lend identity, so of course the beginning of our history is the greatest target. Of course, that's a recipe for misconceptions. The founding of this Republic is not only ripe for misinformation, but outright disinformation, as everyone wants to see themselves in the founders especially at the first of their political enemies. But it's time to dispel ten of the most common myths.
Errata: Washington first acknowledged the name "town-destroyer" in 1755 b/c of his great-grandfather and Charles Brant later applied the name to the Sullivan Expedition (thx TheAlexSchmidt)
------------------------------------------------------------
*Bibliography*
David Armitage, “The Declaration of Independence and International Law,” _William and Mary Quarterly_ 59 (January 2002): 39-64. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3491637
Bernard Bailyn, _The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution_ (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2017). https://amzn.to/3SSu5Bp
Steven K. Green, _Inventing a Christian America: The Myth of the Religious Founding_ (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015). https://amzn.to/38DvnxC
Michael D. Hattem, “The Historiography of the American Revolution,” _Journal of the American Revolution_ (27 August 2013). https://allthingsliberty.com/2013/08/historiography-of-american-revolution/
Gwenda Morgan, _The Debate on the American Revolution_ (Manchester, N.York: Manchester University Press, 2007). https://amzn.to/38Bn7hW
Andrew M. Schocket, _Fighting over the Founders: How We Remember the American Revolution_ (New York: New York University Press, 2015). https://amzn.to/2NQV7b3
_A Companion to the American Revolution,_ eds. Jack P. Greene and J.R. Pole (New York: Blackwell Publishers, 2000). https://amzn.to/2VMs4s0
_Myth America: Historians Take On the Biggest Legends and Lies About Our Past,_ edited by Kevin M. Kruse and Julian E. Zelizer (New York: Basic Books, 2022). https://amzn.to/3J5XsNP
------------------------------------------------------------
Connected videos
• 3:18 unitarians: https://youtu.be/5B8vgdS8ikU
• 4:45 2nd great awakening: https://youtu.be/0AwHLRqX3Qk
• 9:07 England vs. France: https://youtu.be/7HZTEmflKj4
• 9:07 Britain vs. France: https://youtu.be/2it5h9e41Xo
• 13:11 Lost cause myth: https://youtu.be/5EOhXF5lNgQ
• 13:41 Nationalism: https://youtu.be/UGXffvDj_E8
• 17:40 How revolutionary? https://youtu.be/LRdmx_Y40yw
• 19:11 US influence on French Revolution: https://youtu.be/k6FmJwOJ1rg
• 24:01 Sectional Crisis lecture: https://youtu.be/QEnYk2xgEIo
• 27:54 Neoliberalism: https://youtu.be/kBp69R_K1a0
------------------------------------------------------------
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=CynicalCypher88
Support the channel through PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/CynicalHistorian
or by purchasing MERCH: https://cynical-historian-shop.fourthwall.com/
LET'S CONNECT:
Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/cynicalhistorian
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cynicalcypher88
Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/cynicalhistorian.bsky.social
Threads: https://www.threads.net/@cynicalhistorian
Discord: https://discord.gg/Ukthk4U
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cynical_History
The misconceptions and chapters:
0:00 Introduction
1:07 Founders wanted Judeo-Christian values
5:37 Founders were fully original thinkers
7:23 Our government/revolution began in 1776
9:40 Slavery drove the Revolution
13:17 Independence birthed a modern nation
17:15 It was a conservative revolution
19:23 The constitution is flawless
21:02 Founders were like-minded men of the people
23:37 Patriots rebelled primarily because of taxes
27:16 Liberty means small government
29:58 Outtro
- published: 29 Jun 2023
- views: 418618
1:00:38
"God's Little Acre": Life, Death, Work, and Worship in the African Heritage Community of Newport, RI
On March 24, 2021, Historic New England invited public historian Keith W. Stokes to speak about a historically noteworthy burying ground in Rhode Island that th...
On March 24, 2021, Historic New England invited public historian Keith W. Stokes to speak about a historically noteworthy burying ground in Rhode Island that the African heritage community commonly called “God’s Little Acre.” Learn about how Newport was the largest and most active slave port in British North America and about the African people who lived, worked, worshiped, and eventually were buried in Colonial Newport in God’s Little Acre.
https://wn.com/God's_Little_Acre_Life,_Death,_Work,_And_Worship_In_The_African_Heritage_Community_Of_Newport,_Ri
On March 24, 2021, Historic New England invited public historian Keith W. Stokes to speak about a historically noteworthy burying ground in Rhode Island that the African heritage community commonly called “God’s Little Acre.” Learn about how Newport was the largest and most active slave port in British North America and about the African people who lived, worked, worshiped, and eventually were buried in Colonial Newport in God’s Little Acre.
- published: 08 Apr 2021
- views: 342
1:15:04
The Rise of the U.S Economy (Documentary)
Entire Economic History of USA Summarized - Documentary - 1620-2024
From the Thirteen Colonies to the largest economic superpower in the world. Booms, depressi...
Entire Economic History of USA Summarized - Documentary - 1620-2024
From the Thirteen Colonies to the largest economic superpower in the world. Booms, depressions, wars, inventions, critical characters all reveal the greatest economic success story of all time.
Thank you for watching the video. Please like and subscribe, and leave feedback in the comments below. Anything is appreciated!
Timestamps:
0:00 A Land of Opportunity (1620-1700)
1:54 Colonial Beginnings (1700-1776)
11:01 Birth of a Nation (1776-1860)
28:28 Civil War & Industrial Surge (1860-1914)
38:43 Boom to Bust (1914-1950)
50:29 Cold War Prosperity (1950-1980)
1:00:29 Reaganomics & Tech Revolution (1980-2000)
1:07:40 21st Century Challenges (2000-Present)
https://wn.com/The_Rise_Of_The_U.S_Economy_(Documentary)
Entire Economic History of USA Summarized - Documentary - 1620-2024
From the Thirteen Colonies to the largest economic superpower in the world. Booms, depressions, wars, inventions, critical characters all reveal the greatest economic success story of all time.
Thank you for watching the video. Please like and subscribe, and leave feedback in the comments below. Anything is appreciated!
Timestamps:
0:00 A Land of Opportunity (1620-1700)
1:54 Colonial Beginnings (1700-1776)
11:01 Birth of a Nation (1776-1860)
28:28 Civil War & Industrial Surge (1860-1914)
38:43 Boom to Bust (1914-1950)
50:29 Cold War Prosperity (1950-1980)
1:00:29 Reaganomics & Tech Revolution (1980-2000)
1:07:40 21st Century Challenges (2000-Present)
- published: 08 Feb 2024
- views: 117
34:19
Election of 1800
A contentious election is nothing new in American history. Yet the presidential election of 1800—pitting incumbent John Adams against Thomas Jefferson—still sta...
A contentious election is nothing new in American history. Yet the presidential election of 1800—pitting incumbent John Adams against Thomas Jefferson—still stands out as one of the most controversial. This hotly contested race introduced new levels of partisanship and ushered in significant political realignment, but it also marked the first peaceful transfer of power in the young United States.
Join us on Tuesday, November 2, at 1:00 p.m. for an encore presentation of our Election of 1800 livestream with Thomas Jefferson, interpreted by Bill Barker, and John Adams, interpreted by Steve Holloway.
https://wn.com/Election_Of_1800
A contentious election is nothing new in American history. Yet the presidential election of 1800—pitting incumbent John Adams against Thomas Jefferson—still stands out as one of the most controversial. This hotly contested race introduced new levels of partisanship and ushered in significant political realignment, but it also marked the first peaceful transfer of power in the young United States.
Join us on Tuesday, November 2, at 1:00 p.m. for an encore presentation of our Election of 1800 livestream with Thomas Jefferson, interpreted by Bill Barker, and John Adams, interpreted by Steve Holloway.
- published: 02 Nov 2021
- views: 1600
1:46:14
Confederacy Series #1 - The History of "White" with Edward Ingebretsen
Confederacy Series #1 - The History of "White" - Livestream
The first time the word 'white' was used as a descriptor of a person was, likely 1613. This progra...
Confederacy Series #1 - The History of "White" - Livestream
The first time the word 'white' was used as a descriptor of a person was, likely 1613. This program sorts out the prehistory of "race" as it developed through European religious institutions, colonial practices and commercial exploitation. "White" is first found in Virginia law in the 1690s. And, why, e.g. Western global aesthetics still privilege a politics of colorism. It wasn't until 1940 that the rules were changed to allow women of color to enter the Miss America pageant. Before that, the official rules stated that contestants had to be "of good health and of the white race."
__________________________
Presenter: Edward J. Ingebretsen, Ph.D
Ingebretsen holds advanced degrees in Theology, Philosophy and Education, and a Ph.D. from Duke in American Literature and Culture. His courses include Anglo-colonial race theory and practice; animals, justice and culture; Gay culture and theory, and Ethics on the Fly: The daily practice of Moral habit. His publications include At Stake: Monsters and rhetoric of fear in American Culture (2001). And Maps of Heaven, Maps of Hell: Religious Terror as Memory from the Puritans to Stephen King (1995). He has lived in DC since he began teaching at Georgetown University in 1986.
Ed Ingebretsen, Ph.D
Georgetown University
Emeritus Professor,
English, American Studies, Animal Studies
[email protected]
________________________
Edward Ingebretsen - Enslaved Series
Enslaved Washington, DC: 1790-2021
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxdB5yW-yR4
Enslaved Series - Empire of Blood: Europe 1454-1807
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymDVdH_7Mck
Enslaved Series - Slaver Nation: Euro-American 1495 to Jim Crow
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gz9KCBDjt30
Enslaved Series - Slavery & The U.S. Economy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAWBY7OeahE
Enslaved Series - Rise! Black Resistance from Gabriel’s Revolt to George Floyd
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=soXW3ldZd0E
Enslaved Series - White: Race as a Theory of History
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiDw111pl-s
Enslaved Series - The Laws of U.S. Apartheid
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gINDkQcuJvI
Enslaved Series - First Peoples of America and Indigenous Slavery
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5L6flo9hNQ
Washington, DC History & Culture
A non-profit community organization.
Experience the history and culture of Washington, DC - and the world!
YouTube:
http://www.Youtube.com/c/WashingtonDCHistoryCulture
Facebook:
https://www.Facebook.com/DCHistoryAndCulture
Eventbrite:
https://DCHistoryAndCulture.Eventbrite.com
Meetup:
https://www.Meetup.com/DCHistoryAndCulture
Donations Support Our Non-Profit Community Programs - Thank You!
PayPal:
[email protected]
Venmo: @DCHistoryAndCulture
GoFundMe: https://gofund.me/d29491c0
Thank you!
Robert Kelleman
[email protected]
https://wn.com/Confederacy_Series_1_The_History_Of_White_With_Edward_Ingebretsen
Confederacy Series #1 - The History of "White" - Livestream
The first time the word 'white' was used as a descriptor of a person was, likely 1613. This program sorts out the prehistory of "race" as it developed through European religious institutions, colonial practices and commercial exploitation. "White" is first found in Virginia law in the 1690s. And, why, e.g. Western global aesthetics still privilege a politics of colorism. It wasn't until 1940 that the rules were changed to allow women of color to enter the Miss America pageant. Before that, the official rules stated that contestants had to be "of good health and of the white race."
__________________________
Presenter: Edward J. Ingebretsen, Ph.D
Ingebretsen holds advanced degrees in Theology, Philosophy and Education, and a Ph.D. from Duke in American Literature and Culture. His courses include Anglo-colonial race theory and practice; animals, justice and culture; Gay culture and theory, and Ethics on the Fly: The daily practice of Moral habit. His publications include At Stake: Monsters and rhetoric of fear in American Culture (2001). And Maps of Heaven, Maps of Hell: Religious Terror as Memory from the Puritans to Stephen King (1995). He has lived in DC since he began teaching at Georgetown University in 1986.
Ed Ingebretsen, Ph.D
Georgetown University
Emeritus Professor,
English, American Studies, Animal Studies
[email protected]
________________________
Edward Ingebretsen - Enslaved Series
Enslaved Washington, DC: 1790-2021
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxdB5yW-yR4
Enslaved Series - Empire of Blood: Europe 1454-1807
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymDVdH_7Mck
Enslaved Series - Slaver Nation: Euro-American 1495 to Jim Crow
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gz9KCBDjt30
Enslaved Series - Slavery & The U.S. Economy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAWBY7OeahE
Enslaved Series - Rise! Black Resistance from Gabriel’s Revolt to George Floyd
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=soXW3ldZd0E
Enslaved Series - White: Race as a Theory of History
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiDw111pl-s
Enslaved Series - The Laws of U.S. Apartheid
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gINDkQcuJvI
Enslaved Series - First Peoples of America and Indigenous Slavery
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5L6flo9hNQ
Washington, DC History & Culture
A non-profit community organization.
Experience the history and culture of Washington, DC - and the world!
YouTube:
http://www.Youtube.com/c/WashingtonDCHistoryCulture
Facebook:
https://www.Facebook.com/DCHistoryAndCulture
Eventbrite:
https://DCHistoryAndCulture.Eventbrite.com
Meetup:
https://www.Meetup.com/DCHistoryAndCulture
Donations Support Our Non-Profit Community Programs - Thank You!
PayPal:
[email protected]
Venmo: @DCHistoryAndCulture
GoFundMe: https://gofund.me/d29491c0
Thank you!
Robert Kelleman
[email protected]
- published: 10 Aug 2022
- views: 372
1:31:30
Bridge the Atlantic with the Iron and Steel Heritage Partnership - April 21, 2021 (ZOOM meeting)
Bridging the Atlantic was a presentation highlighting the history, connection, and interpretation of Iron Bridge Gorge, a World Heritage Site in Shropshire, Eng...
Bridging the Atlantic was a presentation highlighting the history, connection, and interpretation of Iron Bridge Gorge, a World Heritage Site in Shropshire, England and multiple iron sites in southeastern Pennsylvania, including Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site. The presentation featured Gillian Crumpton and Georgina Grant from Iron Bridge Gorge and David Blackburn, former site director at Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site and currently with Landis Valley Village and Farm Museum. The presentation was organized by the Iron and Steel Heritage Partnership, which was formed to attract visitors to and educate residents about sites associated with iron and steel history in southeastern Pennsylvania. This region boats the longest history with and connection to the iron and steel industry and has the largest collection of historic forgets and furnaces located in concentration in this country.
https://wn.com/Bridge_The_Atlantic_With_The_Iron_And_Steel_Heritage_Partnership_April_21,_2021_(Zoom_Meeting)
Bridging the Atlantic was a presentation highlighting the history, connection, and interpretation of Iron Bridge Gorge, a World Heritage Site in Shropshire, England and multiple iron sites in southeastern Pennsylvania, including Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site. The presentation featured Gillian Crumpton and Georgina Grant from Iron Bridge Gorge and David Blackburn, former site director at Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site and currently with Landis Valley Village and Farm Museum. The presentation was organized by the Iron and Steel Heritage Partnership, which was formed to attract visitors to and educate residents about sites associated with iron and steel history in southeastern Pennsylvania. This region boats the longest history with and connection to the iron and steel industry and has the largest collection of historic forgets and furnaces located in concentration in this country.
- published: 22 Apr 2021
- views: 73
22:23
The First Great Awakening (Part 1)
This lecture is a three-part slideshow presentation with narration by David H. Warren.
In part one, he mentions four great awakenings in the history of this co...
This lecture is a three-part slideshow presentation with narration by David H. Warren.
In part one, he mentions four great awakenings in the history of this country, focusing primarily on the first which occurred between 1730-1760, when the 13 colonies were still under British rule. This awakening has to do with a renewed interest toward religion and spiritual thinking. He also discusses reasons why this took place here in America.
https://wn.com/The_First_Great_Awakening_(Part_1)
This lecture is a three-part slideshow presentation with narration by David H. Warren.
In part one, he mentions four great awakenings in the history of this country, focusing primarily on the first which occurred between 1730-1760, when the 13 colonies were still under British rule. This awakening has to do with a renewed interest toward religion and spiritual thinking. He also discusses reasons why this took place here in America.
- published: 09 Jul 2020
- views: 103