Colonial Williamsburg History Podcasts - Image Enhanced

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 30:51:51
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Sinopsis

American History Podcasts from Colonial Williamsburg

Episodios

  • The George Washington Seal

    16/03/2015 Duración: 14min

    A pocket-sized ornament gives monumental insight into the private life of America’s best-known General: George Washington.

  • Marry Me?

    02/03/2015 Duración: 13min

    Modern marriage owes its structure to an historic form. Equal parts love, practicality, and business, today’s unions share more than you’d think with their colonial counterparts.

  • Through the Ranks

    16/02/2015 Duración: 18min

    A new web features follows an entering class of Fifers and Drummers on their journey through the ranks.

  • Resilience in Tragedy: African American Lives

    02/02/2015 Duración: 12min

    African American history is weighted with tragedy, but bringing the fullness of life to the stories of enslaved individuals is the mission of the African American History Program under the direction of Stephen Seals.

  • George Washington’s Wallet

    19/01/2015 Duración: 09min

    What was in George Washington’s wallet? Long before the establishment of a standard American currency, there was trade, barter and credit. How were these financial activities handled with the myriad coins and metals in circulation?

  • Futuristic Lab Reveals Historic Secrets

    05/01/2015 Duración: 12min

    Technologies that used to be beyond reach for museum professionals now can lend new insights into the hidden compositions of materials, metals, and paints. Conservator Kirsten Moffitt explains how a spike on a screen can spot a fake or reveal a discovery.

  • Happy Birthday, Peter Pelham

    29/12/2014 Duración: 15min

    The heart of a church is its organ; and the heart of its organ is its organist. This year we celebrate the 300th anniversary of Bruton Parish Church, and the 293rd birthday of the first man to grace its organ bench: Peter Pelham. Colorful and well-connected, this musician was at the center of the American […]

  • Old Stitch: A Beer for the Ages

    15/12/2014 Duración: 15min

    Relax with a brew from the past, courtesy of Master of Historic Foodways Frank Clark. Twenty years of study and practice have resurrected the 18th century’s favorite beer: Old Stitch.

  • Old School Home Brew

    01/12/2014 Duración: 14min

    The Historic Campus of the College of William and Mary had one more secret to tell, and it was a big one. Archaeologist Andy Edwards describes the surprise, and the clues that lead them to hope they’ve stumbled upon the College’s early brewhouse.

  • Pumpkin’s Progress

    17/11/2014

    Gain a new respect for the good old pumpkin. Author Mary Miley Theobald traces the history of the venerable gourd.

  • Communicating Complicated Concepts

    03/11/2014 Duración: 12min

    Rats on a ship smuggle a story of transatlantic trade and a colonial global economy. It’s a big idea, but the concept is made simple by the team of writers, researchers and producers who create Colonial Williamsburg’s Emmy-winning Electronic Field Trip series.

  • Burial Shrouds

    20/10/2014 Duración: 16min

    What were colonists buried in? This was a question posed to Research Librarian Juleigh Clark. Tracking down the answer led her, and us, through the history of funerals, burials, shrouds and winding sheets.

  • Brick by Brick

    13/10/2014

    It takes a lot of bricks to build a Market House and our brickmakers are busy. So it seems like a good time to revisit this October 2011 podcast about the process for the building blocks of the Historic Area. Brickmaker Jason Whitehead tells the story.

  • Reading History Backwards

    06/10/2014 Duración: 11min

    Jamestowne Island’s Director of Archeological Research and Interpretation Bill Kelso says that choosing which historic sites to protect from deterioration of all kinds is a matter of reading history backwards. We must consider “What are the priorities today, what are the legacies today of our history? And then look to what areas contributed.”

  • The Farm Eternal

    29/09/2014 Duración: 14min

    No matter where the Earth glides on its axis, the days both long and short shine on a years-worth of work on the colonial farm. At Great Hopes plantation, the turning of the seasons brings with it a task suited to the temperatures: plowing, sowing, planting and harvest. Learn the rhythm of the year with […]

  • An Autumn Spectacular

    22/09/2014 Duración: 12min

    Planning the fiery colors of autumn is a year-round endeavor for Manager of Landscape Services Laura Viancour. She and her team keep Colonial Williamsburg’s trees healthy and maintained, and they inform their choices with historic documentation of the 18th-century’s treescape.

  • Before the First Shots are Fired

    15/09/2014 Duración: 18min

    Retired US Marine Corps General Anthony Zinni has some sharp insights and powerful ideas to share in his new book, “Before the First Shots are Fired: How America Can Win or Lose off the Battlefield.” Listen this week as he previews some of the philosophies he shares in his fourth book.

  • The Early Music Festival: From England to America

    08/09/2014 Duración: 12min

    The 2014 Early Music Festival promises to be a lively one. With instruments, scores, and performances of an 18th-century vintage, you’ll be surrounded by the sounds of another century. Enjoy this musical preview featuring Jane Hanson and Michael Monaco from the opera “Thomas and Sally.”

  • Skill and Science in Historic Trades

    01/09/2014

    Intelligence born of practice combines with the study of science to complete the historic tradesman’s store of knowledge. There was no better spokesman for the Historic Trades program than Director Jay Gaynor. Jay recently passed away and we miss him. This encore podcast is dedicated to him.

  • African American Religion

    25/08/2014 Duración: 14min

    When people from various regions of Africa were forcefully transported to the colonies, they brought nothing with them but the clothes on their backs and the beliefs of their hearts. This latter possession varied widely by region and tradition, but was to each a fundamental part of daily life. Historian Harvey Bakari describes the African […]

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