What the Black Man Wants by Frederick Douglass

What the Black Man Wants by Frederick Douglass

Freedom is easy to celebrate in slogans and hard to define when the laws get written. Today we sit with Frederick Douglass at the end of the Civil War as he delivers one of the most direct speeches of the Reconstruction era: “What the Black Man Wants.” The country has ended slavery in practice and is debating the 13th Amendment, but Douglass pushes the real issue to the front: what does freedom actually mean if millions of formerly enslaved people still lack political power? We walk through ...

Episoder(199)

Frederick Douglass- "What To The Slave is the Fourth of July"

Frederick Douglass- "What To The Slave is the Fourth of July"

A July Fourth stage without a full share of freedom is a hard place to stand, which is exactly why Frederick Douglass chose July 5th. We dig into the strategy and soul of his 1852 address—why he scorc...

12 Mar 22min

From Declaration To Declaration: How Seneca Falls Reframed American Equality

From Declaration To Declaration: How Seneca Falls Reframed American Equality

Ever read the words “all men and women are created equal” and felt the ground shift under American history? We revisit the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 to explore how Elizabeth Cady Stanton, with F...

11 Mar 21min

Abraham Lincoln’s Lyceum Address And The Fight For Law

Abraham Lincoln’s Lyceum Address And The Fight For Law

A young lawyer in 1838 stood before the Young Men’s Lyceum and asked a chilling question: what happens to a republic when people start believing the law binds everyone but themselves? We welcome Dr. A...

10 Mar 19min

Andrew Jackson, Calhoun, And The Crisis That Nearly Split The Union

Andrew Jackson, Calhoun, And The Crisis That Nearly Split The Union

A tariff fight doesn’t usually threaten to crack a nation, but the Nullification Crisis came dangerously close. We open with a plain-English primer on nullification—what it is, where it came from, and...

9 Mar 13min

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 Nationa...

6 Mar 18min

Jackson’s Bank Veto Explained

Jackson’s Bank Veto Explained

Power, personality, and constitutional guardrails collide as we unpack Andrew Jackson’s two most consequential vetoes: the Maysville Road and the Second Bank of the United States. We trace how a singl...

5 Mar 12min

How Cherokee Law Challenged Georgia And Jackson

How Cherokee Law Challenged Georgia And Jackson

A constitution became a shield. That’s the unlikely turning point at the heart of this story, where the Cherokee Nation adopted a written charter in 1827—not to surrender identity, but to defend commu...

4 Mar 32min

Tocqueville On Reflective Patriotism

Tocqueville On Reflective Patriotism

Patriotism without thinking is brittle. Thinking without affection is cold. We bring those forces together through Tocqueville’s lens of reflective patriotism and ask how a nation can love itself hone...

3 Mar 24min

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