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Tag Archives: George Washington
Are There No Great Movies about the American Revolution?
I have been watching the AMC series, “Turn: Washington’s Spies,” of late. This series is based on a fine book, Alexander Rose’s Washington’s Spies: The Story of America’s First Spy Ring (2006), which is both informative and exciting to read. This … Continue reading
Posted in History, Politics
Tagged "Turn: Washington's Spies, 1776, Al Pacino, Alan Alda, Alexander Rose, All for Liberty, AMC, American Revolution, Ann Francis, April Morning, Benjamin Franklin, Burt Lancaster, Clarence Felder, Claudette Colbert, Continental Army, Cornel Wilde, Declaration of Independence, Drums Along the Mohawk, Dumb and Dumber, Francis Marion, Frank S. Nugent, Gen. John Burgoyne, George Bernard Shaw, George Washington, Gettysburg, Golden Raspberry Awards, Henry Fonda, Howard Da Silva, Howard Fast, Jeff Daniels, John Adams, John Adams (HBO, John Ford, Johnny Tremain (Disney, Joshua Chamberlain, Joy Buel, Ken Howard, Kirk Douglas, Laurence Olivier, Lexington Green, Maj. John André, Mary Fish Silliman, Mary Silliman's War, Mel Gibson, Michael Caine, Michelle Pfieffer, Mohawk War, New York Times, Patriots, revolution, Richard Buel, Swamp Fox, Swamp Fox (Disney, Sweet Liberty, The Adams Chronicles (PBS, The Crossing, The Devil’s Disciple, The Patriot, The Scarlet Coat, The Way of Duty: A Woman and Her Family in Revolutionary America, Thomas Jefferson, Tommy Lee Jones, Tories, Washington's Spies: The Story of America's First Spy Ring, William Daniels
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Wednesday’s Book Review: “The Whites of their Eyes”
The Whites of their Eyes: The Tea Party’s Revolution and the Battle over American History. By Jill Lepore. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2010. There is a war being waged over American history. Sorry if you weren’t aware of it, … Continue reading
Wednesday’s Book Review: “Independence”
Independence: The Struggle to Set America Free. By John Ferling. New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2012. Writer John Ferling, has a knack for writing engaging, reflective, and insightful historical narratives. In Independence: The Struggle to Set America Free he tackles the process … Continue reading
Posted in History
Tagged Abigail Adams, American Revolution, Benjamin Franklin, Bloomsbury Press, Charles James Fox, George III, George Washington, History, Independence: The Struggle to Set America Free, James Wilson, John Adams, John Dickinson, John Ferling, Joseph Galloway, Lord Dartmouth, Lord Howe, Robert Livingston, Robert Morris, Samuel Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine
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Have You Ever Seen the “Abilene Paradox” in Action?
I’m pretty sure you have seen this dynamic, although you may not be aware of it with this name. It is fundamentally a construct of Jerry B. Harvey, now a retired professor of Management at George Washington University. He first described … Continue reading
Wednesday’s Book Review: “Benjamin Franklin”
Benjamin Franklin. By Edmund S. Morgan. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2002. Benjamin Franklin is one of the first rank “founding fathers,” along with Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and George Washington. But he was strikingly different from all of … Continue reading
Wednesday’s Book Review: “An Artist in Treason: The Extraordinary Double Life of General James Wilkinson”
An Artist in Treason: The Extraordinary Double Life of General James Wilkinson. By Andro Linklater. New York: Walker and Co., 2009. One of the nation’s hallmark beliefs, bequeathed to the citizens of the United States by the founders, is the … Continue reading
Posted in History
Tagged Aaron Burr, Alexander Hamilton, Andro Linklater, Burr Conspiracy, Founding Fathers, Frederick Jackson Turner, George Washington, John Adams, Louisiana Conspiracy, Louisiana Purchase, m James Wilkinson, M.R. Werner, Revolutionary War, Robert Leckie, The Admirable Trumpeter, Thomas Jefferson
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Was the United States Founded as a Christian Nation?
Why do some Americans insist that the United States was founded as a Christian nation? And what does that mean anyway? How does a Christian nation act? Why does one segment—a very vocal segment—of modern American society insists that the … Continue reading
Posted in Community of Christ, Mormonism, Politics, Religion, Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Tagged Brigham Young, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, George Washington, History, Joseph Smith, Roger Williams, theocracy, theocratic-democracy, Thomas Jefferson
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Wednesday’s Book Review: “Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different”
Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different. By Gordon S. Wood. New York: Penguin Press, 2006. This book is an engrossing account of the formation of the United States by one of the most sophisticated and celebrated historians of our … Continue reading
Posted in History, Politics
Tagged Aaron Burr, Alexander Hamilton, American Revolution, Benjamin Franklin, David McCullough, early national period, Enlightenment, Founding Fathers, George Washington, Gordon S. Wood, History, James Madison, John Adams, John Dickinson, politics, presidential power, public perceptions, Richard Brookhiser, Thomas Hutchinson, Thomas Jefferson, Tom Paine, united states
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