C-SPAN 3 TV Schedule
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Lectures in History: Baseball During the Depression
57 minutesPepperdine University professor Loretta Hunnicutt taught a class about baseball during the Great Depression. She looked at the role of baseball in American culture and the origins of sports journalism.
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Woodrow Wilson & Henry Cabot Lodge
58 minutesPatricia O'Toole recounted the struggle between President Woodrow Wilson and Senate Majority Leader Henry Cabot Lodge over ratification of the 1919 Versailles Treaty, which ended World War I and created the League of Nations. She is the author of "The Moralist: Woodrow Wilson and the World He Made." The Massachusetts Historical Society hosted this virtual event.
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Relics of the Revolution in New York City
45 minutesColonial Williamsburg curator Erik Goldstein talked about Revolutionary War relics that were excavated by amateur historians in New York City between 1880 and 1920. The Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia hosted this program as part of their conference on artifacts from the Revolutionary War.
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The Civil War: Ken Rutherford, "America's Buried History"
1 hour, 5 minutesAuthor Ken Rutherford talks about the early history of landmines, which were used for the first time on a widespread basis during the Civil War. The American Civil War Museum in Appomattox, Virginia, hosted this program.
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Latter-day Saints Migration in the 1800s
1 hour, 4 minutesIn 1838, the Missouri Governor issued an executive order forcing thousands of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to flee west. Brigham Young University professor Fred Woods talked about their journey to Salt Lake City, Utah. This program was hosted by the Kansas City Public Library in Missouri.
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Lectures in History: American Churches During WWI
1 hour, 13 minutesHillsdale College Professor Richard Gamble taught a class on American churches and religion during World War I. He discussed how American pastors, ministers and rabbis spoke about the Great War before and after the U.S. entered the conflict. This lecture was part of a course titled "The U.S. from the Great War to the Cold War." Hillsdale College is located in Hillsdale, Michigan.
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Mary Llewellyn McNeil, "Century's Witness"
57 minutesMary Llewellyn McNeil explored the life of 20th century journalist Wallace Carroll. Politics & Prose bookstore in Washington, D.C., hosted this event.
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Nancy Davis, "The Chinese Lady"
57 minutesFormer Smithsonian curator Nancy Davis told the story of Afong Moy, a Chinese woman who came to America as a promotional ploy by a merchant selling Eastern wares, but who would become the subject of poetry and a style trendsetter in the 1830s. The New-York Historical Society hosted this virtual program.
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Relics of the Revolution in New York City
46 minutesColonial Williamsburg curator Erik Goldstein talked about Revolutionary War relics that were excavated by amateur historians in New York City between 1880 and 1920. The Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia hosted this program as part of their conference on artifacts from the Revolutionary War.
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The Civil War: Ken Rutherford, "America's Buried History"
1 hour, 5 minutesAuthor Ken Rutherford talks about the early history of landmines, which were used for the first time on a widespread basis during the Civil War. The American Civil War Museum in Appomattox, Virginia, hosted this program.
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Latter-day Saints Migration in the 1800s
1 hour, 4 minutesIn 1838, the Missouri Governor issued an executive order forcing thousands of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to flee west. Brigham Young University professor Fred Woods talked about their journey to Salt Lake City, Utah. This program was hosted by the Kansas City Public Library in Missouri.
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Lectures in History: American Churches During WWI
1 hour, 13 minutesHillsdale College Professor Richard Gamble taught a class on American churches and religion during World War I. He discussed how American pastors, ministers and rabbis spoke about the Great War before and after the U.S. entered the conflict. This lecture was part of a course titled "The U.S. from the Great War to the Cold War." Hillsdale College is located in Hillsdale, Michigan.
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Mary Llewellyn McNeil, "Century's Witness"
57 minutesMary Llewellyn McNeil explored the life of 20th century journalist Wallace Carroll. Politics & Prose bookstore in Washington, D.C., hosted this event.
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Nancy Davis, "The Chinese Lady"
57 minutesFormer Smithsonian curator Nancy Davis told the story of Afong Moy, a Chinese woman who came to America as a promotional ploy by a merchant selling Eastern wares, but who would become the subject of poetry and a style trendsetter in the 1830s. The New-York Historical Society hosted this virtual program.
-
Relics of the Revolution in New York City
45 minutesColonial Williamsburg curator Erik Goldstein talked about Revolutionary War relics that were excavated by amateur historians in New York City between 1880 and 1920. The Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia hosted this program as part of their conference on artifacts from the Revolutionary War.
-
The Civil War: Ken Rutherford, "America's Buried History"
1 hour, 4 minutesAuthor Ken Rutherford talks about the early history of landmines, which were used for the first time on a widespread basis during the Civil War. The American Civil War Museum in Appomattox, Virginia, hosted this program.
-
Latter-day Saints Migration in the 1800s
1 hour, 4 minutesIn 1838, the Missouri Governor issued an executive order forcing thousands of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to flee west. Brigham Young University professor Fred Woods talked about their journey to Salt Lake City, Utah. This program was hosted by the Kansas City Public Library in Missouri.
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Lectures in History: American Churches During WWI
1 hour, 12 minutesHillsdale College Professor Richard Gamble taught a class on American churches and religion during World War I. He discussed how American pastors, ministers and rabbis spoke about the Great War before and after the U.S. entered the conflict. This lecture was part of a course titled "The U.S. from the Great War to the Cold War." Hillsdale College is located in Hillsdale, Michigan.
-
Mary Llewellyn McNeil, "Century's Witness"
57 minutesMary Llewellyn McNeil explored the life of 20th century journalist Wallace Carroll. Politics & Prose bookstore in Washington, D.C., hosted this event.
-
Nancy Davis, "The Chinese Lady"
57 minutesFormer Smithsonian curator Nancy Davis told the story of Afong Moy, a Chinese woman who came to America as a promotional ploy by a merchant selling Eastern wares, but who would become the subject of poetry and a style trendsetter in the 1830s. The New-York Historical Society hosted this virtual program.
-
Relics of the Revolution in New York City
45 minutesColonial Williamsburg curator Erik Goldstein talked about Revolutionary War relics that were excavated by amateur historians in New York City between 1880 and 1920. The Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia hosted this program as part of their conference on artifacts from the Revolutionary War.
-
The Civil War: Ken Rutherford, "America's Buried History"
1 hour, 4 minutesAuthor Ken Rutherford talks about the early history of landmines, which were used for the first time on a widespread basis during the Civil War. The American Civil War Museum in Appomattox, Virginia, hosted this program.
-
Latter-day Saints Migration in the 1800s
1 hour, 3 minutesIn 1838, the Missouri Governor issued an executive order forcing thousands of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to flee west. Brigham Young University professor Fred Woods talked about their journey to Salt Lake City, Utah. This program was hosted by the Kansas City Public Library in Missouri.
-
Lectures in History: American Churches During WWI
1 hour, 13 minutesHillsdale College Professor Richard Gamble taught a class on American churches and religion during World War I. He discussed how American pastors, ministers and rabbis spoke about the Great War before and after the U.S. entered the conflict. This lecture was part of a course titled "The U.S. from the Great War to the Cold War." Hillsdale College is located in Hillsdale, Michigan.
-
Mary Llewellyn McNeil, "Century's Witness"
55 minutesMary Llewellyn McNeil explored the life of 20th century journalist Wallace Carroll. Politics & Prose bookstore in Washington, D.C., hosted this event.