Washington’s Final Act of Statesmanship: Confronting Slavery

Washington’s Final Act of Statesmanship: Confronting Slavery

George Washington sits at the center of American civic memory, but the hardest truths about him often sit at the edges of what we’re taught. We talk with Dr. Paul Carrese about Washington as an owner of enslaved people and the complicated story behind his decision to free those he legally could through his 1799 will. It’s a conversation that doesn’t look away from the moral contradiction at the founding, and it also refuses to flatten history into easy heroes or easy villains. We trace what ...

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Episoder(254)

The Declaration At 250

The Declaration At 250

The Declaration of Independence is 250 years old, but it refuses to sit quietly on a shelf. We end Civics in a Year by asking one question that cuts through politics and posture: what does the Declara...

4 Jul 25min

Jefferson And Madison and the University of Virginia

Jefferson And Madison and the University of Virginia

Jefferson wrote his own epitaph, and the choice still startles: “Father of the University of Virginia” makes the cut, while “President of the United States” does not. That single detail opens a window...

3 Jul 21min

Roger Sherman, The Founder We Missed

Roger Sherman, The Founder We Missed

He signed all four major American revolutionary documents, helped craft the constitutional structure we still argue about, and yet most people can’t tell you a single detail about him. We’re talking a...

1 Jul 20min

Hamilton’s Moral Reckoning

Hamilton’s Moral Reckoning

Hamilton is easy to caricature: the brilliant operator, the relentless Federalist, the guy who never stops pushing. But the closer you look, the more the story bends toward something unexpected: a lat...

1 Jul 15min

How The Massachusetts Constitution Shaped American Government

How The Massachusetts Constitution Shaped American Government

John Adams has a branding problem. If your mental picture comes from a musical, a miniseries, or the vague sense that he “wanted to be king,” we put that claim on trial by reading his work where it ma...

30 Jun 31min

Benjamin Franklin And The Bold Experiment Of Pennsylvania’s 1776 Constitution

Benjamin Franklin And The Bold Experiment Of Pennsylvania’s 1776 Constitution

Pennsylvania tried something in 1776 that still tempts us today: push democracy to the front of the line and assume the people will keep government honest. With Dr. Beienberg, we walk through the Penn...

29 Jun 19min

Lore of the Founding: Cicero And The Duty To Serve

Lore of the Founding: Cicero And The Duty To Serve

A republic doesn’t collapse all at once. It frays in public, and it frays in private, through shortcuts that feel justified, norms that stop being enforced, and citizens who decide it’s safer to sit t...

26 Jun 41min

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