nedryun | March 31, 2011
Ned Ryun continues his series, “Days of Revolution.” Listen to Episode 17, “A Violent Backlash” In this episode Ned discusses: The violent reaction to the Stamp Act in the colonies The hanging in effigy of Andrew Oliver, royal stamp agent, in Boston The ransacking of Thomas Hutchinson’s home Samuel Adams condemns the violence The New [...]
Category: Days of Revolution |
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Tags: American history, Andrew Oliver, Boston, Declaration of Independence, history, Ned Ryun, New York, New Yorks Sons of Liberty, Parliament, Richard Henry Lee, Sam Adams, Samuel Adams, Stamp Act, Thomas Hutchinson, Thomas Jefferson, Virginia
nedryun | January 12, 2011
Ned Ryun Continues His Series, “Days of Revolution.” Listen to Episode 14, “An Army Amongst Us.” In this episode: Questions regarding how to protect the western frontier continue. Tensions among the colonists continue as The Quartering Act is passed by parliament. The colonists feel reprisal from British troops living among them. The colonists resist funding [...]
Category: Days of Revolution |
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Tags: Declaration of Independence, French and Indian War, Great Britain, Militias, New York, Parliament, Pontiac's Rebellion, Second Amendment, Stamp Act of 1765, Standing Army, Taxation Without Representation, The Quartering Act, The Revolutionary War, Third Amendment
nedryun | December 14, 2010
Ned Ryun Continues His Series, “Days of Revolution.” Listen to Episode 13, “The Stamp Act and the Dawn of Popular Resistance.” In this episode: The high price tag of defending western frontiers and public debt leads British’s Parliament to pass The Stamp Act of 1765. The act begins the first unified resistance from the colonies [...]
Category: Days of Revolution |
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Tags: Admiralty Court, Albany Conference, Benjamin Franklin, Committees of Correspondence, Declaration of Independence, Edmund Burke, George Grenville, Georgia, Great Britain, House of Commons, Isaac Barre, John Hughes, Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, Parliament, Patrick Henry, Pontiac's Rebellion, Rhode Island, Samuel Adams, Seven Years' War, Stamp Act of 1765, Tar and Feathering, Taxation, Taxation Without Representation, The Revolutionary War, The Sons of Liberty, The Stamp Act Congress, The Sugar Act of 1764, Virginia, Virginia Resolves, Virtual Representation, William Pitt
nedryun | November 9, 2010
Ned Ryun Continues His Series, “Days of Revolution.” Listen to Episode 11, “The Rights of the Colonies Asserted and Proved.” In this episode: The philosophical foundations of America are captured, in part, by James Otis, author of The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved. The problems with Writs of Assistance and search and [...]
Category: Days of Revolution |
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Tags: Admiralty Court, Boston, Consent of the Governed, Court of Exchequer, Declaration of Independence, Divine Right, Fourth Amendment, French and Indian War, Great Britain, James Otis, John Adams, John Hancock, John Locke, Molasses Act, Natural Law, Natural Rights, New England, Parliament, Proclamation Act of 1763, Search and Seizure, Separation of Powers, Stamp Act of 1765, Superior Court of Massachusetts, Taxation Without Representation, The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved, The Sugar Act of 1764, Unalienable Rights, Writs of Assistance
nedryun | July 13, 2010
Ned Ryun Continues His Series, “Days of Revolution.” Listen to Episode 2, “First Ventures.” In this episode: The first English settlements: Roanoke, Jamestown and Plymouth. The establishment of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. The Dutch founding of New York and New Jersey. Catholics form their own colony in Maryland. Other early colonies.
Category: Days of Revolution |
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Tags: 1620, American Revolution, Anapolis, Anglicanism, Broadway, Cambridge, Cecilius Calvert, Connecticut, Declaration of Independence, Dover, Duke of York, Dutch, East Jersey, Elizabeth I, England, Exeter, Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, George Calvert, George Carteret, Hartford, Henry Hudson, Holland, Hudson River, Ireland, Irish Tactics, Jamestown, John Lord Berkley, John Smith, John Thompson, King Charles II, King James II, London Company, Maine, Manhattan, Maryland, Maryland Toleration Act, Massachusetts, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Mayflower, New Amsterdam, New England, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Netherlands, New Sweden, New York, Peter Minuit, Peter Stuyvesant, Pilgrims, Plymouth Company, Portsmouth, Powhatan Indians, Puritans, Quakers, Queen Anne, Roanoke, Sagadahoc Colony, Separatists, Thomas Delaware, Thomas Hooker, Virginia, Wall Street, Walter Raleigh, West Jersey, William Stone
nedryun | July 6, 2010
Ned Ryun Begins a New Podcast Series Entitled, “Days of Revolution.” Listen to Episode 1, “The Die is Cast.” In this episode: An overview of the events, figures and key points of debate leading up to the Declaration of Independence. Would the Second Continental Congress declare independence? What acts and military events led to the [...]
Category: Days of Revolution |
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Tags: 1776, Benjamin Franklin, Benjamin Harrison, Boston, Boston Massacre, Bunker Hill, Caesar Rodney, Charles Thompson, Coercive Acts, Concord, Connecticut, Continental Army, Declaration of Independence, Delaware, Dorchester Heights, Edward Rutledge, Elbridge Gerry, Ethan Allen, First Continental Congress, French and Indian War, General Howe, George Reed, George Washington, Georgia, Great Britain, Halifax Resolves, Henry Knox, Hessians, James Wilson, John Adams, John Dickinson, John Dunlap, John Hancock, King George III, Lexington, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, New York City, North Carolina, Parliament, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Prohibitory Act, Rhode Island, Richard Henry Lee, Robert Livingston, Robert Morris, Roger Sherman, Samuel Adams, Second Continental Congress, South Carolina, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas McKean, Virginia, William Franklin
nedryun | August 3, 2009
Ned Ryun continues his series on the Constitutional Convention. In this Episode: The life of Gouverneur Morris, drafter of the U.S. Constitution. Morris’ work in New York politics. Morris as chief advocate for the Continental Army. Morris’ role in the Constitutional Convention. Morris’ dealings with England and later role as Minister to France during the [...]
Category: History of the Constitutional Convention |
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Tags: Alexander Hamilton, Articles of Confederation, Barbados, Bastille, Battle of Long Island, Bermuda, Bronx, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand, Committee on Style, Constitution of New York, Continental Army, Continental Congress, Declaration of Independence, Dewitt Clinton, Duke of Leeds, Erie Canal, Federalist Papers, Federalist Party, French Revolution, Friedrich von Steuben, George Washington, Gouverneur Morris, Great Britain, Hartford Convention, Jacobites, Jamaica, James Madison, James Monroe, John Bryan, John Jay, King's College, Lewis Morris, Lord Frederick North, Louis XVI, Marquis de Condorcet, Marquis de Lafayette, Maximilien Robespierre, Nathanael Greene, New York, New York Provincial Congress, Northwest Territories, Peg Leg, Reign of Terror, Robert Morris, Roger Sherman, Rufus King, Samuel Osgood, Slavery, Staats Long Morris, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, Treaty of Ghent, Treaty of Paris, Valley Forge, Versailles, War of 1812, William Constable, William Duer, William Pitt, William Samuel Johnson, William Smith
nedryun | July 28, 2009
Ned Ryun continues his series on the Constitutional Convention. In this Episode: The final debates at the Constitutional Convention center on signing questions. Elbridge Gerry, George Mason and Edmund Randolph all voice displeasure with the document and refuse to sign. A committee on style is formed to write the Constitution. A Bill of Rights is [...]
Category: History of the Constitutional Convention |
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Tags: Alexander Hamilton, Articles of Confederation, Benjamin Franklin, Bill of Rights, Charles Coatsworth Pinckney, Committee on Style, Declaration of Independence, Edmund Randolph, Elbridge Gerry, George Mason, George Washington, Gouverneur Morris, House of Representatives, James Madison, James Wilson, John Dickinson, Luther Martin, Nathaniel Gorham, Patrick Henry, President, Ratification Debates, Roger Sherman, Rufus King, Senate, Slavery, State Declaration of Rights, Thomas Jefferson, U.S. Constitution, William Samuel Johnson
nedryun | June 15, 2009
Ned Ryun continues his series on the Constitutional Convention. In this Episode: The life of Roger Sherman, signer of America’s first four founding documents. Sherman lives the typical American life beginning as a cobbler and ending as a national statesman. Sherman’s political and legal career in Connecticut. Sherman’s role in the Continental Congress and in [...]
Category: History of the Constitutional Convention |
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Tags: Articles of Association, Articles of Confederation, Benjamin Franklin, Bill of Rights, Connecticut, Connecticut Compromise, Connecticut General Assembly, Connecticut State Senate, Continental Congress, Declaration of Independence, Elizabeth Hartwell, Fisher Aimes, Great Compromise, House of Representatives, John Adams, John Witherspoon, Jonathan Edwards, Jonathan Trumbull, Judiciary Act, Oliver Ellsworth, Paper Money, Philadelphia, Rebekah Prescot, Roger Sherman, Samuel Dunbar, Slavery, Thomas Jefferson, Treaty of Paris, U.S. Constitution, William Livingston, William Paterson, William Pierce, William Samuel Johnson, Yale College
nedryun | June 8, 2009
Ned Ryun continues his series on the Constitutional Convention. In this Episode: Religion and the Founding Fathers. The Founding Fathers were not deists, atheists and agnostics as some have characterized. A look at the first settlers and their motivations. Colonial Protestantism, the Puritans, and the influence of Covenant Theology on early American society. Comments about [...]
Category: History of the Constitutional Convention |
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Tags: Agnosticism, Atheism, Benjamin Franklin, Calvinism, Capitalism, Christianity, Church of England, Clinton Rossiter, Covenant Theology, Declaration of Independence, Deism, Founding Fathers, Freedom of Religion, Individualism, James Madison, Jesus Christ, John Adams, John Locke, John Quincy Adams, Protestantism, Puritanism, Religion, Roman Catholic Church, Samuel Rutherford, Self Government, Separation of Church and State, Slavery, Social Contract, Ten Commandments, Thomas Jefferson, Toleration, U.S. Constitution