Production of houses, and the rise of automobiles helped great an alternative to urban living. His class is about an hour. Today we are talking about the suburbs. How many of you grew up in the suburbs . Almost all of you. What kind of activities would you use to describe the suburbs . Proud. Proud okay. Perhaps an unusual choice. Like being from nowhere. Friss good. Other descriptions, characterizations . Safe. A utopia. Friss a utopia. Family oriented. Friss family oriented. Nicholas were you gonna Say Something . I love this. Good. Some people utopia. Maybe this is different generation. I thought people were going to say lame and boring, which is why i picked this very lame typeface. I thought we would start with an image of contemporary suburbia. This is an engagement shoot. A young couple, taken to the suburban street for their engagement. People get married, they take engagement photos. This went around the internet for a while and lots of people, including myself, laughed at it.
Sense of history, thank you for joining us today. It is my pleasure to introduce our keynote speaker, historian joanne freeman. Doctor freeman is a professor of history at yale university. She specializes in Early National american politics and culture. She is the author of several influential and awardwinning books and i will mention two of them. Affairs of honor from 2001 and most recently, feel the blood congressional violence in antebellum america, which i found particularly helpful for my own work. It seems like a reverse echo of the current and contemporary political scene in the United States. I will leave it at that. Dr. Freeman is known for her understanding of hamilton, which she rediscovered, i would say, before broadway did a couple of years ago. I asked doctor freeman about her relationship with history and she was kind enough to respond to my request for the information. It really reads like a love story. She fell in love with history beginning in 1776. I am sorry. She is
Longterm sense of history, thank you for joining us today. It is my pleasure to introduce our keynote speaker, historian joanne freeman. Dr. Freeman is a professor of history at yale university. She specializes in Early National american politics and culture. She is the author of several influential and awardwinning books and i will mention two of them. Affairs of honor from 2001 and most recently, feel field of blood congressional violence in antebellum america, which i found particularly helpful for my own work. It seems like a reverse echo of the current and contemporary political scene in the United States. I will leave it at that. Dr. Freeman is known for her understanding of hamilton, which she rediscovered, i would say, before broadway did a couple of years ago. I asked dr. Freeman about her relationship with history and she was kind enough to respond to my request for the information. It really reads like a love story. She fell in love with history beginning in 1776. I am sorry
Yale University History and studies professor Joanne Freeman , editor of the essential hamilton. Morning. Im a professor of history at the university of Central Florida and a proud member of the board of the National Council for History Education. I trust all of you are doing well and keeping safe. These are very strange times. Even for historians who have a longterm sense of history, thank you for joining us today. It is my pleasure to introduce speaker, historian Joanne Freeman. Dr. Freeman is a professor of history at yale university. She specializes in Early National american politics and culture. She is the author of several influential and awardwinning books and i will mention two of them. From 2001 andnor most recently, feel the blood congressional violence in which ium america, found particularly helpful for my own work. Ofseems like a reverse echo the current and contemporary political skeet clinical seen in the United States. I will leave it at that. Herfreeman is known for u
Book, captives of liberty prisoners of war and the politics of vengeance in the American Revolution history professor t. Cole jones illustrates inhumane conditions inside 18thcentury prison camps and examines how the Continental Congress dealt with the problem of thousands of pows, a population that sometimes outnumbered the American Army. Next, professor jones discusses his book at the American Revolution institute of the society of the cincinnati. Dir. Mccallister clark good evening, everyone. Its so nice to see you here this evening. So many good old friends and new faces. I am ellen mccallister clark, the Library Director at the American Revolution institute of the society of cincinnati. It is my very special pleasure tonight to be the one to introduce t. Cole jones, who us thisspeaking to evening about his new book captives of liberty prisoners of war and the politics of vengeance in the American Revolution, which has just come out from the university of pennsylvania press. We hav