Chief Executives in the Cockpit—When Presidents Take to the Skies

Chief Executives in the Cockpit—When Presidents Take to the Skies

In this episode we look at all U.S. presidents who served as fighter pilots or in any sort of military combat role. We also look at the first president to fly (it was in a rinky-dink Wright Bros. flyer), the development of Air Force One, and the theory that aviators make better leaders.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Did Haiti’s First and Last King Squander the Revolution or Succeed in Underappreciated Ways?

Did Haiti’s First and Last King Squander the Revolution or Succeed in Underappreciated Ways?

Slave, revolutionary, king, Henry Christophe was, in his time, popular and famous the world over. Born to an enslaved mother on the Caribbean island of Grenada, Christophe first fought to overthrow th...

13 Mars 202551min

What Ancient Greeks and Victorian Explorers Thought Was at the North Pole

What Ancient Greeks and Victorian Explorers Thought Was at the North Pole

The North Pole looms large in our collective psyche—the ultimate Otherland in a world mapped and traversed. It is the center of our planet’s rotation, and its sub-zero temperatures and strange year of...

11 Mars 202541min

Nothing Healed America’s Wounds After the Civil War Like Baseball

Nothing Healed America’s Wounds After the Civil War Like Baseball

The nineteenth century was a time of rapid growth and development for the game of “base ball,” and players George Wright and Albert Spalding were right in the thick of it. These two young men, the fir...

6 Mars 202550min

How an 1870 Murder Created San Francisco

How an 1870 Murder Created San Francisco

Shortly before dusk on November 3, 1870, just as the ferryboat El Capitan was pulling away from its slip into San Francisco Bay, a woman clad in black emerged from the shadows and strode across the cr...

4 Mars 202537min

Failed Futures: If Alexander The Great Hadn’t Died, He Might Have Conquered Europe, Circumnavigated Africa, and Built His Own Silk Road

Failed Futures: If Alexander The Great Hadn’t Died, He Might Have Conquered Europe, Circumnavigated Africa, and Built His Own Silk Road

And Alexander wept, seeing as he had no more worlds to conquer. That’s a quote from Hans Gruber in Die Hard, which is a very convoluted paraphrase from Plutarch’s essay collection Moralia. There’s ple...

27 Feb 202534min

Why the Anabasis is the Second-Most Influential Greek Epic (After Homer’s Works)

Why the Anabasis is the Second-Most Influential Greek Epic (After Homer’s Works)

Imagine being stranded thousands of miles deep in enemy territory with 10,000 soldiers, no allies, no clear way home, and the only means of escape was by foot. This was the predicament faced by Xenoph...

25 Feb 202548min

The American Revolution Would Have Been Lost Without a Ragtag Fleet of Thousands of Privateers

The American Revolution Would Have Been Lost Without a Ragtag Fleet of Thousands of Privateers

Privateers were a cross between an enlisted sailor and an outright pirate. But they were crucial in winning the Revolutionary War. As John Lehman, former secretary of the navy under President Ronald R...

20 Feb 202559min

Did Lincoln Save Global Democracy or Undermine It Using Wartime Powers?

Did Lincoln Save Global Democracy or Undermine It Using Wartime Powers?

Did Abraham Lincoln preserve democracy during the Civil War, or did he endanger it in the process? To explore this paradox, we’re joined by renowned historian and Lincoln scholar Allen Guelzo, author ...

18 Feb 202557min

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