Carol Berkin: Women in the American Revolution
Since 1975, the Society of the Cincinnati has sponsored the annual George Rogers Clark Lecture, which recognizes the scholarship of leading historians of the American Revolution. Some of the Clark Lecturers-most notably Edmund S. Morgan, whose The Genius of George Washington is a classic of Washington scholarship-have presented lectures that stand alone as important works of scholarship. Others, including David McCullough, have offered a very personal perspective on one of their major published works. Gordon S. Wood and others have distilled a generation of classroom teaching and scholarship into a synthesis illuminating the major significance of the American Revolution. Still others, including David Hackett Fischer, have offered a glimpse of the historian's craft by presenting a lecture based on their ongoing research.

American Loyalists in the Revolutionary World

George Washington's Long Island Spy Ring

Was the American Revolution Inevitable?

George Washington and the Newburgh Conspiracy

The Founding Mothers of the USA, 3: Eliza Hamilton, Sarah Jay & Dolley Madison

Margaret Atwood shares REAL LIFE parallels in The Handmaid's Tale

19. War and Society

David McCullough on John Adams

Every Revolutionary War Story - Drunk History

Sarah C. M. Paine — Why dictators keep making the same fatal mistake

Dr. Gordon S. Wood at Mercer: 'What Made the Founders Different'

Britain Sold Palestine to Pay Its WWI Debt. The Balfour Declaration Was a Banking Deal!

Thomas Sowell on the Myths of Economic Inequality

The South in the American Revolution

Tories: Fighting for the King in America's First Civil War

Carol Berkin: Myths of the American Revolution

1754: The Bloody History Of The French-Indian Wars | History Of Warfare | Timeline

Catherine Howard: David Starkey Lectures

The Habsburg Monarchy and the American Revolution | Jonathan Singerton

