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Tag Archive for ‘kenneth c. davis’

Defending “terrorists”: What would the Founders do?

In the midst of all the “Tea Party” chatter these days, it is a tad surprising that the anniversary of another significant Boston event went largely unnoticed last week. It was, after all, 240 years ago on March 5, 1770, that the Boston Massacre took place.
And what was the “Boston Massacre,” class?
A mob [...]

TODAY IN HISTORY: Birth of an Anthem

Seuss Day!

If your book was turned down by more than 40 publishers, “what would you do?” Become Dr. Seuss?

Why we “Hide” our History: A videoblog

Don’t Know Much About John Steinbeck

Born on February 27, 1902 in Salinas, California in 1902, was a writer I consider a major personal influence.

John Steinbeck built his reputation writing about the struggles of down-and-out people: Dust Bowl farmers and pearl divers, prostitutes, jobless migrants, and Depression-era hobos.

Washington’s “Confession”

I hope we all know that the cherry tree story is a legend, made up by a pseudobiographer but chiseled into American folklore.
But there is a true story about a young George Washington that most of us never hear. It is the story of his first actual military experience and his signing of a “murder confession.” It is not only more interesting than the cherry tree story but a lot more revealing.

Don’t Know Much About George Washington

“He told the truth, mainly.” –Huck Finn

Persons attempting to find a motive in this narrative will be prosecuted; persons attempting to find a moral in it will be banished; persons attempting to find a plot in it will be shot.
–Notice at the opening of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
America doesn’t have a national holiday to honor a writer. But if we did, [...]

A Presidential Library

The recent success of such award-winning and bestselling presidential biographies as American Lion by Jon Meacham, John Adams by David McCullough as well as Doris Kearns Goodwin’s portrait of Lincoln’s Cabinet, Team of Rivals, are all excellent reminders of our fascination with the Presidency. And a tribute to the value of great historians.
With Presidents [...]

Don’t Know Much About Robert Frost

“I had a lover’s quarrel with the world.”
While contemplating the death of J.D. Salinger, it is worth remembering that another New England transplant, Robert Frost , died on this date January 29 in 1963. He had written his own epitaph, the words above, etched on his headstone in a church cemetery in Bennington, VT.
Apples, birches, [...]