Field Trip Friday: How Gathering On The National Mall Shapes Memory And Democracy

Field Trip Friday: How Gathering On The National Mall Shapes Memory And Democracy

The National Mall isn’t just a backdrop for photos; it’s a working stage where free speech, public memory, and civic learning come alive. We sit down with Jeremy Goldstein of the Trust for the National Mall to unpack how this stretch of grass and granite functions as a true First Amendment forum—and why organizing there still matters for a healthy democracy. We move from ideals to implementation, breaking down how permits work, what organizers must prepare, and how the National Park Service ...

Episoder(201)

How The 13th And 15th Amendments End Slavery And Redefine Voting

How The 13th And 15th Amendments End Slavery And Redefine Voting

The Constitution can promise freedom and still fail to deliver it. We dig into the 13th and 15th Amendments and ask what they were really designed to fix after the Civil War and why their impact has s...

26 Mar 18min

Reconstruction Under The Constitution

Reconstruction Under The Constitution

Reconstruction sounds like a neat “after the Civil War” chapter until you look at the Constitution and realize the country is trying to do something almost impossible: bring the South back into the Un...

25 Mar 18min

Lincoln’s Second Inaugural

Lincoln’s Second Inaugural

A president stands at the Capitol near the end of the Civil War, with victory in sight and grief everywhere and he chooses restraint over celebration. We dig into Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Ad...

24 Mar 11min

Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address

Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address

A three-minute speech at a mass grave should not be able to reframe a nation’s purpose, yet the Gettysburg Address does exactly that. We sit down with Dr. Aaron Kushner to set the scene at Gettysburg ...

23 Mar 41min

The Emancipation Proclamation

The Emancipation Proclamation

Freedom didn’t arrive with a single stroke of Lincoln’s pen—it arrived through a careful, constitutional strategy forged in the pressure of civil war. We walk through how the Emancipation Proclamation...

20 Mar 15min

Habeas Corpus, War Powers, And The Constitution

Habeas Corpus, War Powers, And The Constitution

What happens when a nation must choose between immediate safety and the legal guardrails that define its freedom? We dive into Abraham Lincoln’s most contested constitutional move: suspending habeas c...

19 Mar 13min

Lincoln's First Inaugural

Lincoln's First Inaugural

A nation is splitting, nerves are raw, and a new president steps onto the stage with a lawyer’s caution and a moral compass fixed on first principles. We take you into Abraham Lincoln’s first inaugura...

18 Mar 12min

Real Cabinet Wives Of The Jackson Administration: The Petticoat Affair

Real Cabinet Wives Of The Jackson Administration: The Petticoat Affair

A dinner party snub shouldn’t derail a presidency—unless it reveals everything about how power really works. We follow the Petticoat Affair from whispered rumors around Peggy Eaton to a capital-wide b...

17 Mar 19min

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