C-SPAN 3 TV Schedule
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Patrick Murphy, "The Irish in St. Louis"
1 hour, 2 minutesAuthor Patrick Murphy discussed St. Louis' earliest Irish immigrants and their complex assimilation story. The Missouri History Museum in St. Louis hosted this event.
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Herbert Hoover & the Politics of Famine Relief
37 minutesHerbert Hoover and the American Relief Administration fed, clothed, and provided medicine and other aid to 10 million Russians -- including those in the Ukraine region -- suffering from famine in 1921-23. His reputation as a humanitarian helped elect him to the White House. At this Herbert Hoover Presidential Library conference in West Branch, Iowa, Bertrand Patenaude, a Hoover Institution research fellow, talked about the politics of famine aid.
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CIA Museum Tour
43 minutesAmerican History TV toured the CIA Museum at the agency's Langley, Virginia, headquarters. Director and curator Robert Byer highlighted covert action tools of the trade in the CIA's collection, dating from the Cold War to 21st century terrorism. The museum was created primarily for CIA employees - as a resource for their ongoing work - and is not open to the general public.
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Lectures in History: The Ohio Dynasty of Presidents
53 minutesUniversity of Akron professor Kevin Kern discussed the Ohioans who were elected president, including the seven that served between 1868 and 1920.
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The Civil War: Loudoun County, Virginia, during the Civil War
1 hour, 30 minutesLocal historians shared stories about Loudoun County, Virginia, during the Civil War. This program was part of a series sponsored by the Loudoun Museum called, "History on Tap."
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National Nordic Museum
26 minutesNational Nordic Museum Executive Director & CEO Eric Nelson talked about the museum's work, collections and exhibits in Seattle, Washington. A 2019 Act of Congress designated it a national museum. It is the only museum of its size in the United States to tell the stories of the immigrants who left Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. Mr. Nelson has received two knighthoods for his work -- from the Swedish king and the Finnish president.
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Sarah Silkey, "Black Woman Reformer"
1 hour, 15 minutesLycoming College history professor Sarah Silkey recounted journalist and civil rights activist Ida. B. Well's 1893-94 anti-lynching campaigns and her attempts to gain support from abolitionists in Britain. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's "Great Lives" lecture series in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
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Dave Tell, "Remembering Emmett Till"
1 hour, 13 minutesAuthor Dave Tell gave several account of the 1955 lynching of Emmett Till and how this history is remembered and commemorated in the South. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's in Fredericksburg, Virginia, "Great Lives" lecture series.
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CIA Museum Tour
43 minutesAmerican History TV toured the CIA Museum at the agency's Langley, Virginia, headquarters. Director and curator Robert Byer highlighted covert action tools of the trade in the CIA's collection, dating from the Cold War to 21st century terrorism. The museum was created primarily for CIA employees - as a resource for their ongoing work - and is not open to the general public.
-
Lectures in History: The Ohio Dynasty of Presidents
53 minutesUniversity of Akron professor Kevin Kern discussed the Ohioans who were elected president, including the seven that served between 1868 and 1920.
-
The Civil War: Loudoun County, Virginia, during the Civil War
1 hour, 30 minutesLocal historians shared stories about Loudoun County, Virginia, during the Civil War. This program was part of a series sponsored by the Loudoun Museum called, "History on Tap."
-
National Nordic Museum
26 minutesNational Nordic Museum Executive Director & CEO Eric Nelson talked about the museum's work, collections and exhibits in Seattle, Washington. A 2019 Act of Congress designated it a national museum. It is the only museum of its size in the United States to tell the stories of the immigrants who left Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. Mr. Nelson has received two knighthoods for his work -- from the Swedish king and the Finnish president.
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Sarah Silkey, "Black Woman Reformer"
1 hour, 15 minutesLycoming College history professor Sarah Silkey recounted journalist and civil rights activist Ida. B. Well's 1893-94 anti-lynching campaigns and her attempts to gain support from abolitionists in Britain. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's "Great Lives" lecture series in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
-
Dave Tell, "Remembering Emmett Till"
1 hour, 13 minutesAuthor Dave Tell gave several account of the 1955 lynching of Emmett Till and how this history is remembered and commemorated in the South. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's in Fredericksburg, Virginia, "Great Lives" lecture series.
-
CIA Museum Tour
43 minutesAmerican History TV toured the CIA Museum at the agency's Langley, Virginia, headquarters. Director and curator Robert Byer highlighted covert action tools of the trade in the CIA's collection, dating from the Cold War to 21st century terrorism. The museum was created primarily for CIA employees - as a resource for their ongoing work - and is not open to the general public.
-
Lectures in History: The Ohio Dynasty of Presidents
53 minutesUniversity of Akron professor Kevin Kern discussed the Ohioans who were elected president, including the seven that served between 1868 and 1920.
-
The Civil War: Loudoun County, Virginia, during the Civil War
1 hour, 30 minutesLocal historians shared stories about Loudoun County, Virginia, during the Civil War. This program was part of a series sponsored by the Loudoun Museum called, "History on Tap."
-
National Nordic Museum
26 minutesNational Nordic Museum Executive Director & CEO Eric Nelson talked about the museum's work, collections and exhibits in Seattle, Washington. A 2019 Act of Congress designated it a national museum. It is the only museum of its size in the United States to tell the stories of the immigrants who left Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. Mr. Nelson has received two knighthoods for his work -- from the Swedish king and the Finnish president.
-
Sarah Silkey, "Black Woman Reformer"
1 hour, 15 minutesLycoming College history professor Sarah Silkey recounted journalist and civil rights activist Ida. B. Well's 1893-94 anti-lynching campaigns and her attempts to gain support from abolitionists in Britain. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's "Great Lives" lecture series in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
-
Dave Tell, "Remembering Emmett Till"
1 hour, 13 minutesAuthor Dave Tell gave several account of the 1955 lynching of Emmett Till and how this history is remembered and commemorated in the South. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's in Fredericksburg, Virginia, "Great Lives" lecture series.
-
CIA Museum Tour
43 minutesAmerican History TV toured the CIA Museum at the agency's Langley, Virginia, headquarters. Director and curator Robert Byer highlighted covert action tools of the trade in the CIA's collection, dating from the Cold War to 21st century terrorism. The museum was created primarily for CIA employees - as a resource for their ongoing work - and is not open to the general public.
-
Lectures in History: The Ohio Dynasty of Presidents
53 minutesUniversity of Akron professor Kevin Kern discussed the Ohioans who were elected president, including the seven that served between 1868 and 1920.
-
The Civil War: Loudoun County, Virginia, during the Civil War
1 hour, 31 minutesLocal historians shared stories about Loudoun County, Virginia, during the Civil War. This program was part of a series sponsored by the Loudoun Museum called, "History on Tap."
-
National Nordic Museum
25 minutesNational Nordic Museum Executive Director & CEO Eric Nelson talked about the museum's work, collections and exhibits in Seattle, Washington. A 2019 Act of Congress designated it a national museum. It is the only museum of its size in the United States to tell the stories of the immigrants who left Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. Mr. Nelson has received two knighthoods for his work -- from the Swedish king and the Finnish president.
-
Sarah Silkey, "Black Woman Reformer"
1 hour, 15 minutesLycoming College history professor Sarah Silkey recounted journalist and civil rights activist Ida. B. Well's 1893-94 anti-lynching campaigns and her attempts to gain support from abolitionists in Britain. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's "Great Lives" lecture series in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
-
Dave Tell, "Remembering Emmett Till"
1 hour, 13 minutesAuthor Dave Tell gave several account of the 1955 lynching of Emmett Till and how this history is remembered and commemorated in the South. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's in Fredericksburg, Virginia, "Great Lives" lecture series.