

The History of the Americans
Jack Henneman
The history of the people who live in the United States, from the beginning.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 1, 2023 • 40min
Sidebar: The “Historical Sense”
Inspired by an email from a longstanding and attentive listener, this Sidebar episode examines an essay by Gordon Wood introducing his book The Purpose of the Past. We consider what it means to have a "historical sense," and the humility that comes with it. We also look at the history of the debate over the purpose of history, and briefly at the difference between critical theory, on the one hand, and teaching the "ugly parts," on the other.
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Selected references for this episode
Gordon Wood, The Purpose of the Past: Reflections on the Uses of History
David Motadel, "The Political Role of the Historian," Contemporary European History, 2023.

Jul 25, 2023 • 35min
The Founding of Maryland Part 2: The Ark and the Dove
The Charter of Maryland having passed seals, Cecil Calvert, the Second Lord Baltimore, stayed in England to fend off political attacks against his Proprietary Colony. He asked his younger brother Leonard to lead the first settlers in the Ark and the Dove to the banks of the Potomac River. When they get there in the early spring of 1634, they meet Henry Fleet, an English trader who had been in the area since 1621, four of those years as the captive of one of the tribes in the northern Chesapeake. Fleet would turn out to be instrumental in the very successful first year of the Maryland settlement, at St. Mary's City.
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Selected references for this episode
Matthew Page Andrews, The Founding of Maryland
George Bancroft, History Of The United States Of America, Volume 1
Wesley Frank Craven, The Southern Colonies in the Seventeenth Century 1607-1689
A. J. Morrison, "The Virginia Indian Trade to 1673," The William and Mary Quarterly, October 1921

Jul 15, 2023 • 41min
The Founding of Maryland Part 1: Calvert’s Dream
George Calvert had a dream. He had grown up during the most exciting moments of Elizabeth I's reign, a time when England was transforming from a backwater to a legitimate Atlantic power. He wanted to found a colony in North America.
After a catastrophic attempt in southern Newfoundland, Calvert negotiated a charter from Charles I for a new form of colony - a "proprietary colony," for which Calvert would be the "Lord Proprietor," in the northern reaches of the Chesapeake. It would be known as "Mary Land," and was the largest individual land grant in English North America. The most important provision in the charter, which conferred vast and personal powers on Calvert, was known as the "Bishop of Durham clause," and dated from English legal precedent of more than 600 years. The roots of American legal traditions are very old.
Sadly for George, he would die even before his charter "passed through seal." Fortunately for us, his son Cecil would pick up the project and execute it wisely and effectively.
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Selected references for this episode
Matthew Page Andrews, The Founding of Maryland
Wesley Frank Craven, The Southern Colonies in the Seventeenth Century 1607-1689
Bernard C. Steiner, "The Maryland Charter and Early Explorations of That Province," The Sewanee Review, April 1908.
The Charter of Maryland
Bishop of Durham Clause
County of Avalon Dig Site
George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore (Wikipedia)

Jul 3, 2023 • 35min
Sidebar: John F. Kennedy’s Speech of July 4, 1946
Longstanding listeners know that we have a tradition of talking about great speeches in American history on Memorial Day and July 4, when many such great speeches have been delivered. If you search in your engine of choice, you will find various listicles of great Independence Day speeches. They always include Ronald Reagan’s in 1984, FDR’s in 1942 – the first 4th of July of our participation in World War II – and Frederick Douglass’s famous speech in 1852. The pantheon of such speeches also includes the Independence Day speech of 29-year-old John F. Kennedy in 1946, the first 4th after World War II. That speech, which was very much about one understanding of American history, is the subject of this episode.
The setting for the speech was Boston’s Faneuil Hall. The occasion was Boston’s Independence Day celebration. The context was Jack Kennedy’s first campaign for public office, for the Democratic nomination for the Massachusetts 11th Congressional District.
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Selected references for this episode
Robert Dallek, An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917 - 1963
John F. Kennedy, "SOME ELEMENTS OF THE AMERICAN CHARACTER" INDEPENDENCE DAY ORATION BY JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY, CANDIDATE FOR CONGRESS FROM THE 11TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT, JULY 4, 1946

Jul 1, 2023 • 49min
Anne Hutchinson Part 3: Conviction and Legacy
Anne Hutchinson, having defeated every argument against her in the civil trial, cannot resist having the last word and in so doing condemns herself. She is banished, and after a long winter under house arrest and a second trial to excommunicate her, she joins her family and followers on Aquidneck Island, soon to be Rhode Island.
So how was it that she died on the future site of a golf course in The Bronx?
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Selected references for this episode
Eve LaPlante, American Jezebel: The Uncommon Life of Anne Hutchinson, the Woman Who Defied the Puritans
Edmund S. Morgan, The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop
Edmund S. Morgan, “The Case Against Anne Hutchinson,” The New England Quarterly, December 1937

Jun 22, 2023 • 42min
Anne Hutchinson Part 2: Ordeal by Trial
The Antinomian crisis in the Massachusetts Bay Colony is escalating, threatening to tear it apart just as its leaders perceive a military threat from the Pequots. Anne Hutchinson has been teaching an extreme version of the "covenant of grace" in her after-church discussion group, which has swelled to eighty people or more, including some of the leading men of Boston. Her ideas attack the authority of the conventional Puritan clergy of the Bay. She accuses all but two of them, John Cotton and her brother-in-law, John Wheelwright, of preaching a "covenant of works," fighting words in those days. Needing to end the division, John Winthrop tries diplomacy and reconciliation, but neither Hutchinson nor her opponents show any inclination to compromise. After more than a year of theological debate, the General Court of Massachusetts banishes Wheelwright and brings Hutchinson to trial.
She runs rings around them.
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Selected references for this episode
Francis J. Bremer, John Winthrop: America’s Forgotten Founding Father
Eve LaPlante, American Jezebel: The Uncommon Life of Anne Hutchinson, the Woman Who Defied the Puritans
Edmund S. Morgan, The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop
Edmund S. Morgan, "The Case Against Anne Hutchinson," The New England Quarterly, December 1937.

Jun 8, 2023 • 36min
The Dissenters: Anne Hutchinson Part 1
Anne Hutchinson was the first famous European-American woman, and after Matoaka/Pocahontas, only the second still-famous woman in the lands now encompassed by the United States. She appears in most histories of the United States and its first colonies, including George Brancroft’s History of the United States of America, first published in the 1830s.
Mrs. Hutchinson is famous because she disrupted the community of the Puritan church in Boston in the mid-1630s by attracting most of its congregation to an extreme interpretation of Calvinist theology, for which she was tried, convicted, excommunicated, and expelled, just as Roger Williams had been. An enormous amount of ink has been spilled over Anne Hutchinson over hundreds of years. Older interpretations regard Hutchinson as an extremist and deeply disruptive to the Puritan project in Massachusetts. In more recent years, there has been a lot of sympathetic writing about Hutchinson as the study of women in early America has become more popular, and the Puritans of early Massachusetts decidedly less so. In some circles she is seen as a victim of oppression. Her monument at the Massachusetts State House upholds Hutchinson as a “courageous exponent of civil liberty and religious toleration.”
My own take is that her story is interesting in part because it is something of a Rorschach test – each of these interpretations are defendable to some degree, and the emphasis one or another historian puts on a given interpretation in lieu of others says as much about the author as it does about Mrs. Hutchinson. This makes the complex story of Anne Hutchinson very much a story about ourselves.
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Selected references for this episode
Francis J. Bremer, John Winthrop: America’s Forgotten Founding Father
Eve LaPlante, American Jezebel: The Uncommon Life of Anne Hutchinson, the Woman Who Defied the Puritans
Edmund S. Morgan, Roger Williams: The Church and State
Edmund S. Morgan, The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop

May 25, 2023 • 38min
Sidebar: “The Soldier’s Faith,” a Memorial Day Speech
On May 30 – Memorial Day -- 1895, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., a Harvard man and then a justice on the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, delivered an address to the graduating class of 1895 in Cambridge. The speech, known as “The Soldier’s Faith,” is in and of itself fascinating substantively and also for its indirect effects. Regarding those, Theodore Roosevelt, another Harvard man, read the speech some seven years later and determined to appoint Holmes to the Supreme Court on account of it.
Beyond that, the speech is incredibly prescient, in certain respects, and eloquent, even poetic, on the question of personal courage and purpose to a degree that will seem alien to most Americans today, at least those of us who have never served.
In this special episode for Memorial Day, we read (almost all of) "The Soldier's Faith" with annotations and digressions, which we hope you find fun and interesting!
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Selected references for this episode
Stephen Budiansky, Oliver Wendell Holmes: A Life in War, Law, and Ideas
"The Soldier's Faith"
John Pettegrew, "'The Soldier's Faith': Turn-of-the-Century Memory of the Civil War and the Emergence of Modern American Nationalism," Journal of Contemporary History, January 1996.
George Root, "Just Before the Battle Mother" (YouTube)

May 20, 2023 • 38min
The Pequot War 3: Annihilation
In the spring and summer of 1637, the Puritans of Massachusetts Bay, the English settlers on the Connecticut River, and their Indian allies, the Narragansetts and the eastern Niantics, would wage a war of annihilation against the Pequot tribe of southern Connecticut. It would be the most brutal fighting between Europeans and the Indians of North America since at least 1599 (when the Spanish massacred the Pueblo Indians of the Acoma mesa). It would also be the first time that Europeans set out to extinguish an Indian nation. As such, it would be, arguably, the greatest stain on the legacy of the Puritans of Massachusetts. This is the military history of that war, the causes and run-up having been covered in the last two episodes.
[Errata (5/21/2023): A very longstanding and attentive listener from New Mexico corrected my pronunciation of "Acoma" - the emphasis on the first syllable rather than the second. This is especially embarrassing because I believe he has had to correct me twice, the first time a year and a half ago.
The same correspondent also points out the historical debate over the number of Indians who actually died at the Acoma massacre, and what the Spanish actually did to the feet of the captives. Perhaps the Spanish merely cut off their toes, rather than cutting the foot in half.]
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Selected references for this episode
Alfred A. Cave, The Pequot War
Charles Orr, History of the Pequot War: The Contemporary Accounts of Mason, Underhill, Vincent and Gardener
Timeline of the Pequot War

May 9, 2023 • 39min
The Pequot War 2: Blundering Into War
After the killing of John Oldham and his crew at Block Island, the Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay Colony mobilized an expedition of 90 men under the command of John Endicott. The goal was to deter Pequot aggression, but Endicott would prove, yet again, to be a stern and inflexible man who would fundamentally blunder into full-scale war with the Pequots. In this episode we look at Endicott's raid, the attempt by the Pequots to seduce the Narragansetts into an alliance, the skillful diplomacy of Roger Williams, and the attack by the Pequots on Fort Saybrook in retaliation. We end the episode with one last missed opportunity for peace.
There's a map on the website in the episode notes that is useful for sorting out the geography, if you don't know southern New England like the back of your hand.
Also, if you live in Austin or within a reasonable drive, please let me know if you will join our meet-up of listeners on June 1, 2023 at 6 pm, at a venue still to be arranged. Please send me a note by email or direct message on Twitter or Facebook to let me know if you can make it, so I can estimate attendance and pick the right place.
See Jack's interview with Jon Gabriel
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Selected references for this episode
John M. Barry, Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul
Francis J. Bremer, John Winthrop: America’s Forgotten Founding Father
Alfred A. Cave, The Pequot War
Charles Orr, History of the Pequot War: The Contemporary Accounts of Mason, Underhill, Vincent and Gardener
Timeline of the Pequot War