The Journal of American History Podcast features interviews with our authors and conversations with authors whose books on American history have won awards. Episodes are in MP3 format and will be released in the month preceding each Journal of American History (February, May, August and November). Published quarterly by the Organization of American Historians, the Journal of American History is the leading scholarly publication in the field of U.S. history and is well known as the major reso ...
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Experience the legacy of the world’s most iconic airline, Pan American World Airways! This award-winning history and humanities program brings Pan Am’s 64-year history to life through engaging storytelling and insightful interviews from Pan Am employees, passengers, pilots, journalists, historians, authors, fashionistas, and aviation enthusiasts! Hosted by historian Tom Betti, the program has won the following awards: Gold 2024 & 2023 Muse Creative Awards, Gold 2024 Vega Digital Award, Silve ...
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The American Historical Association is the largest professional organization serving historians in all fields and all professions. The AHA is a trusted voice advocating for history education, the professional work of historians, and the critical role of historical thinking in public life.
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An initiative of the Organization of American Historians' Committee on Marketing and Communications, Intervals arises in the midst of vast disruptions to everyday life, and it gives response to the impact that COVID-19 is having on the OAH community, the history profession, and the informational needs of our many audiences.
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During the sesquicentennial of the Civil War (spring 2011 through spring 2015), the Organization of American Historians is committed to bringing the best current thinking on this complex era to a wide audience. In keeping with our mission to promote excellence in the scholarship, teaching, and presentation of all American history, we aim to explore the war from its beginnings through its aftermath, especially mindful of the needs of history teachers and students, the challenges faced by publ ...
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Welcome to the People’s Historians Podcast from the Zinn Education Project. In light of the popularity of our online mini-classes centered around teaching the Black Freedom Struggle, we’ve converted our online sessions to a podcast with the hope of increasing the teaching of Black lives in the classroom and beyond.
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As the public debates around history grow louder, it seems there’s a gap between how history practitioners understand their work and what the public thinks history is. We need a more productive public conversation about history. But how do we get on the same page? Over the course of this series, we’ll be speaking to historians, history communicators, and educators from around the country about the language we use to communicate history to the public. Hosted by Christy Coleman and Jason Stein ...
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The American Schools of Oriental Research (ASOR) is a non-profit 501 (c)3 organization that supports and encourages the study of the cultures and history of the Near East, from the earliest times to the present. ASOR is apolitical and has no religious affiliation. We were founded in 1900 by twenty one institutions—including Harvard, Princeton, Yale, and Columbia. Over a century later, ASOR has more than 90 consortium institutions, including universities, seminaries, museums, foundations, and ...
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Our "90 in 90 Essay Project Academic Studies" on subjects such as the Federalist Papers, the Constitution; the Amendments; the Classics that Inspired the Constitution, the Executive Branch, the country’s past 57 presidential elections, the Supreme Court, the Congress and the states have resulted in over 3,000 essays contributed by over 200 constitutional scholars, historians and elected officials. This corresponding Podcast features the reading of the daily essay during our 90-Day Study. Our ...
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The United States Civil Rights Trail
The U.S. Civil Rights Trail, The United States Civil Rights Trail
The U.S. Civil Rights Trail podcast is a narrative podcast series where historians and experts explore some of the most significant events of the Civil Rights movement. It features the real stories of real people who were there and who made a difference. And it explains why what took place then is still so relevant to all of us today.
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Responding to Rape – Panel Debrief from the 2024 OAH Conference on American History
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Over the past two decades, scholars have begun to document the centrality of sexual assault in the U.S. political landscape. There has been significant research on how sexual assault (and anti-rape activism) shaped the long civil rights movement, military occupations, and the dynamics of modern feminism. However, scholars are only recently consider…
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Neither the One nor the Other – Panel Debrief from the 2024 OAH Conference on American History
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This special panel debrief edition of the Journal of American History Podcast features a conversation on "Neither the One nor the Other: The Native South in a Black and White World after 1900," held at the 2024 OAH Conference on American History. In this episode, Angela P. Hudson, Denise E. Bates, Dixie Ray Haggard, Robert Caldwell, and Daniel Usne…
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Getting the Story Straight – Panel Debrief from the 2024 OAH Conference on American History
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This special panel debrief edition of the Journal of American History Podcast features a conversation on "Getting the Story Straight: Queering Regional Identities," held at the 2024 OAH Conference on American History. In this episode, La Shonda Mims and Wesley Phelps have a conversation with Marina about the importance of regionality in histories o…
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Missing Histories of Sexual Assault – Panel Debrief from the 2024 OAH Conference on American History
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This special panel debrief edition of the Journal of American History Podcast features a conversation on "Missing Histories of Sexual Assault," held at the 2024 OAH Conference on American History. In this episode, Katherine Ott, Rebecca Campbell, Lourdes Inoa Monegro, and Royleen J. Ross continue their important conversation about the lack of study…
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Episode 49: Edith Head, A Hollywood Legend
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Send us a Text Message. In this episode we explore the life of legendary Hollywood costume designer Edith Head who designed uniforms for Pan American World Airways introduced in 1975 and used until the early 1980s. Then we will be joined by actor Susan Claassen who plays the Hollywood legend in her one-woman production called A CONVERSATION WITH ED…
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Sovereignties in the Atlantic World – Panel Debrief from the 2024 OAH Conference on American History
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This special panel debrief edition of the Journal of American History Podcast features a conversation on "Sovereignties in the Atlantic World: Black and Indigenous Intersections," held at the 2024 OAH Conference on American History. Historians of Indigenous peoples and historians of the African diaspora do not engage with each other often enough. B…
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Queering Work – Panel Debrief from the 2024 OAH Conference on American History
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This special panel debrief edition of the Journal of American History Podcast features a conversation on "Queering Work: LGBT Labor Histories," held at the 2024 OAH Conference on American History. In this episode, Lane Windham, Alex Melody Burnett, Ryan Patrick Murphy, and Shay Olmstead continue their important conversation about queer and trans wo…
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Episode 48: The Archer's...A Family of Aviators
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Send us a Text Message. In this episode we celebrate the Archer’s...a family of aviators. 89-year-old Pan Am Captain Stu Archer joined the airline in 1965 as an engineer after serving in the U.S. Air Force. Stu began flying the 727 and then was promoted to captain on the 747 and later Airbus A300 and A310. He stayed with Pan Am until 1991 and then …
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Nursing for the Common Good – Panel Debrief from the 2024 OAH Conference on American History
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This special panel debrief edition of the Journal of American History Podcast features a conversation on "Nursing for the Common Good: Health Activism, Social Justice, and the History of Nursing Work," held at the 2024 OAH Conference on American History. In this panel, Kara Dixon Vuic, Cory Gatrall, Karissa Haugeberg, and Charissa Threat continue t…
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New Carceral Histories – Panel Debrief from the 2024 OAH Conference on American History
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This special panel debrief edition of the Journal of American History Podcast features a conversation on "New Carceral Histories: Legacies of Punishment before the Era of Mass Incarceration," held at the 2024 OAH Conference on American History. In this panel, Maile Arvin, Abigail Kahn, Halee Robinson, Derek Taira, and Walter Stern continue their im…
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On the Map — a Blogcast Episode
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This Blogcast Episode features Carleigh Beriont's article, "On the Map," first published in Process: A Blog for American History on December 12, 2023. In this episode, Beriont recovers the hidden history of the Marshall Islands, and how this area "has been central to U.S. security and military interests since the Second World War." She explains how…
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Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò on Reparations and Climate Justice
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In this episode, from our series on Teach the Black Freedom Struggle, our hosts, Jesse Hagopian and Cierra Kaler-Jones speak to Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò about his book Reconsidering Reparations. Read about the event and find related resources.
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Episode 47: The "Nisei" Stewardesses of Pan Am
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Send us a Text Message. The Pan Am Museum Foundation recognizes the month of May as Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month and in this episode we explore the history of Pan Am’s “Nisei” Stewardesses with Dr. Christine R. Yano, retired professor of anthropology at the University of Hawai’I and author of the book, Airbour…
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Britain Hopkins—The Origins of the Student Loan Industry in the United States
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In this episode of the Journal of American History Podcast Stephen Andrews speaks with Britain Hopkins about her article, "The Origins of the Student Loan Industry in the United States: Richard Cornuelle, United Student Aid Funds, and the Creation of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program," which appeared in the March 2024 issue of the Journal of Amer…
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Hesitancy against Hope: Reactions to the First Polio Vaccine — a Blogcast Episode
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This Blogcast Episode features Stephen E. Mawdsley's article, "Hesitancy against Hope: Reactions to the First Polio Vaccine," first published in Process: A Blog for American History on January 9, 2024. In this episode, Mawdsley uses the development of the Polio Vaccine to explicate the history public health campaigns and vaccine hesitance in the Un…
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Black Patience: Performance, Civil Rights, and the Unfinished Project of Emancipation
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In this episode, from our series on Teach the Black Freedom Struggle, our host, Jessica Rucker speaks to Julius B. Fleming Jr. about the role of Black theater in the Black Freedom Struggle and the concept of “Black patience.” Read about the event and find related resources.
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Joshua A. McGonagle Althoff—Managing Settlers, Managing Neighbors
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In this episode of the Journal of American History Podcast Amy Ransford speaks with Joshua A. McGonagle Altoff about his article, "Managing Settlers, Managing Neighbors: Renarrating Johnson v. McIntosh through the History of Piankashaw Community Building," which appeared in the March 2024 issue of the Journal of American History. The foundational 1…
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Guåhan and the CHamoru People — a Blogcast Episode
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This Blogcast Episode features Kristin Oberiano's article, "Guåhan and the CHamoru People," first published in Process: A Blog for American History on October 31, 2023. In this episode, Oberiano shows "how the politics of writing history is inextricable from the moments and movements that shaped us." Read the Blog here: https://www.processhistory.o…
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Episode 46: Capt. Mike Bannister, Chief Pilot of British Airways Concorde
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Send us a Text Message. In this episode we welcome back to the program Captain Mike Bannister, the chief pilot of British Airways' Concorde fleet from 1995 to 2003. He is also the author of a recently published book titled Concorde. This book is available through your favorite bookstore or online retailer. Also coming out to great fanfare in 2023 w…
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Yevan Terrien—Enslavement, Freedom, and Belonging in Early New Orleans
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In this episode of the Journal of American History Podcast Steven Andrews speaks with Yevan Terrien about his article, "“Baptiste and Marianne’s Balbásha’: Enslavement, Freedom, and Belonging in Early New Orleans, 1733–1748," which appeared in the September 2023 issue of the Journal of American History. Yevan Terrien’s microhistory of slavery and m…
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Episode 45: National Airlines
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Send us a Text Message. Pan American World Airways acquired National Airlines in 1980 and preserving the history of National is now the responsibility of the Pan Am Museum and we take this duty seriously. In this episode we explore the fascinating history of National Airlines. Then we will be joined by four veterans of National Airlines: Captain Ro…
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Everyday Solidarity Interracial Organizing Stories from The Sum of Us
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In this episode, from our series on Teach the Black Freedom Struggle, our host Rethinking Schools executive director Cierra Kaler-Jones and Rethinking Schools co-editor Jesse Hagopian speak to Heather McGhee about The Sum of Us: How Racism Hurts Everyone, the young readers’ edition of her bestselling book. Read about the event and find related reso…
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Khalil Gibran Muhammad on The Condemnation of Blackness
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In this episode, from our series on Teach the Black Freedom Struggle, our hosts educators Jesse Hagopian and T. J. Whitaker spoke to historian Khalil Gibran Muhammad about his book The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America, which examines the idea of Black criminality in the making of modern urban America. R…
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Episode 44: Capt. Robert Ford and the Long Way Home
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Send us a Text Message. In this special episode we will be exploring the incredible life of Pan Am Captain Robert Ford, a trailblazing flying boat aviator that found international fame with an unscheduled flight round the globe. And we welcome back to the program Pan Am 747 Captain John Marshall that knew Pan Am legend Captain Robert Ford and recor…
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The Machiavelli of the Mexican American People: Steelworkers, the Catholic Church, and Building Political Power — a Blogcast Episode
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This Blogcast Episode features Emiliano Aguilar's article, "The Machiavelli of the Mexican American People: Steelworkers, the Catholic Church, and Building Political Power," first published in Process: A Blog for American History on March 28, 2023. In this episode, Aguilar demonstrates the importance of education and union organizing in creating po…
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Digital Queers: How Computers Transformed LGBTQ Life in the United States — a Blogcast Episode
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This Blogcast episode features Avery Dame-Griff's article "Digital Queers: How Computers Transformed LGBTQ Life in the United States," first published in Process: A Blog for American History on June 29, 2023. In this episode, Dame-Griff examines how the internet and digital communication created new ways for LGBTQ individuals to find and create com…
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Episode 43: Terror at the Rome Airport, December 1973 Attack
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Send us a Text Message. This is a special memorial edition of this program and recognizes the 50th anniversary of the Rome airport attack. We are joined by two survivors that were on a Pan Am plane that was firebombed at the Rome airport on December 17, 1973: Pan Am Flight Engineer Ken Pfrang and Pan Am passenger B.J. Geisler. B.J. is the author of…
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Music: King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band's Mabel's Dream, 1923 X: @JournAmHist Facebook: The Journal of American History #JAHCast #JAHBlogcastOrganization of American Historians által
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North Carolina: Greensboro Sparks a Movement
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This is the North Carolina Civil Rights Trail podcast. A series where historians and experts help us explore significant events in African American history that happened in the state. This is the third and final episode, where we take you to protests and movements across the state inspired and energized by the Greensboro Four sit-in in places such …
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North Carolina: The A&T 4 Sit Down
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This is the North Carolina Civil Rights Trail podcast. A series where historians and experts help us explore significant events in African American history that happened in the state. This is the second of three episodes. And in it, we’re going to learn about how four young men protesting at a department store lunch counter in Greensboro, NC, influ…
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North Carolina: NC Students Start a Revolution
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This is the North Carolina Civil Rights Trail podcast. A series where historians and experts help us explore significant events in African American history that happened in the state. This is the first of three episodes. And in it, we’ll tell the story of the events leading up to the famous A&T Four sit-ins in Greensboro in 1960, including the stor…
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The North Carolina Civil Rights Trail podcast is a series where historians and experts help us explore significant events in African American history that happened in the state. It features well-known events from larger cities like Charlotte, Greensboro and Raleigh. It also tells stories of how everyday citizens joined together to make change in th…
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Episode 42: Operation Babylift: The 1975 Saigon Evacuation
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Send us a Text Message. In this episode we explore Operation Babylift, the historic April 1975 evacuation of more than 3,000 Vietnamese war orphans just before the fall of South Vietnam. We are joined by Thoa Bui, Vice President of Programs and Services for Holt International and Al Topping, Pan Am’s Country Director for South Vietnam. This episode…
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Michael Hines on the Fight for Black History in Schools
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In this episode, from our series on Teach the Black Freedom Struggle, our hosts Rethinking Schools executive director Cierra Kaler-Jones and Rethinking Schools co-editor Jesse Hagopian speak to historian Michael Hines about his book, A Worthy Piece of Work: The Untold Story of Madeline Morgan and the Fight for Black History in Schools. Read about t…
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Blair L. M. Kelley on Black Folk: The Roots of the Black Working Class
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In this episode, from our series on Teach the Black Freedom Struggle, our host, Jesse Hagopian speaks to historian Blair L. M. Kelley about her book, Black Folk: The Roots of the Black Working Class. Read about the event and find related resources
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Episode 41: The Stewardess Labor Movement of the 1960s and 1970s
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Send us a Text Message. In this episode we are joined by Nell McShane Wulfhart, author of the book The Great Stewardess Rebellion: How Women Launched a Workplace Revolution at 30,000 Feet. Nell is a frequent contributor to the New York Times travel section and wrote the column “Carry On” from 2016 to 2019. She has written for Travel + Leisure, Bon …
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Teaching About the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
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In this episode, from our series on Teach the Black Freedom Struggle, our host, educator Jessica Rucker speaks with Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) veterans Courtland Cox, Jennifer Lawson, and Judy Richardson. They discussed the SNCC Legacy Project and lessons that can be learned from SNCC today. Read about the event and find relat…
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Essay 90: Conclusion: Preserving the First Principles of the American Founding by Chris Burkett. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 89: Upholding the Principle of Free Civil Discourse and Public Debate Without Censorship
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Essay 89: Upholding the Principle of Free Civil Discourse and Public Debate Without Censorship by Gary Porter. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 88: Classical History and Governing Devoted to Freedom and Independence Through Restraining Power of Elected Representative
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Essay 88: Classical History and Governing Devoted to Freedom and Independence Through Restraining Power of Elected Representative by Gary Porter. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 87: Principle of a United States Constitution Prescribing Within Itself the Only Lawful Methods of Amendments, by Its Keepers, the American People
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Essay 87: Principle of a United States Constitution Prescribing Within Itself the Only Lawful Methods of Amendments, by Its Keepers, the American People by Gary Porter. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 86: Principle of Secure Borders by Kevin Portteus. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 85: Principle of Distinguishing Between Purpose of Federal, and Governments of the States: Maintaining the Union While Preventing Federal Encroachments on the States and Individual Americans
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Essay 85: Principle of Distinguishing Between Purpose of Federal, and Governments of the States: Maintaining the Union While Preventing Federal Encroachments on the States and Individual Americans by Amanda Hughes. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.…
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Essay 84: Principle of Free Thought and Speech, a Core Component of a Self-Governing People by Tony Williams. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 83: Principle of Freedom of Association, Undissolved and Unweakened, Either to Associate or Not, and Neither under Coercion nor Force
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Essay 83: Principle of Freedom of Association, Undissolved and Unweakened, Either to Associate or Not, and Neither under Coercion nor Force by George Landrith. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 82: Principle of Constitutional Limits on the United States Government To Tax
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Essay 82: Principle of Constitutional Limits on the United States Government To Tax by Tony Williams. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 81: Principle of a Nation’s Longevity Upon Consisting of Public and Private Virtue
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Essay 81: Principle of a Nation’s Longevity Upon Consisting of Public and Private Virtue by Joerg W. Knipprath. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 80: Principle of Civil Discourse To Keep Representative Government, Unhindered Freedom of Speech in the Airing of Grievances
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Essay 80: Principle of Civil Discourse To Keep Representative Government, Unhindered Freedom of Speech in the Airing of Grievances by Andrew Langer. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 79: Principle of Freedom of Assembly
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Essay 79: Principle of Freedom of Assembly by Scot Faulkner. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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Essay 78: Principle of Freedom of Religion by Patrick Garry. Click here to explore our 2023 90-Day Study: First Principles of the American Founding.
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