C-SPAN 3 TV Schedule
Expand All-
Mauro Guillén, "The Perennials - The Megatrends Creating a Postgenerational Society"
1 hour, 7 minutesWharton School professor Mauro Guillen discussed how changes in demographics and technology are altering future generations look at life and work. The Commonwealth Club in San Francisco hosted this program.
-
Lectures in History: Obama's 2004 DNC Keynote Address
1 hour, 2 minutesBarack Obama's keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention was the topic of a class taught by University of Kansas political communication professor Robert Rowland. The University of Kansas is in Lawrence, Kansas.
-
Reel America: "To Help Peace Survive" - 1974
28 minutesThis Defense Department orientation film for soldiers assigned to South Korea gives a brief history of Korea and details the events that led to the Korean War and its aftermath. After detailing the war and the armistice, the film describes what life is like for soldiers stationed there and argues that there is much to see and enjoy in the country.
-
Cable TV, Hollywood & Presidential Politics
50 minutesHistorian Kathryn Brownell talked about the rise of cable television and the mingling of Hollywood celebrity with politics, and how they've impacted presidential campaigns and the presidency itself. The Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan, hosted this program.
-
Reel America: "Valley of the Tennessee" - 1944
29 minutesThis 1944 film was made by the U.S. Office of War Information's Overseas Motion Picture Bureau. It details the history of the Tennessee Valley Authority, or TVA, which was founded in 1933 to address issues in energy, the environment, and economic development in Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, and Mississippi. During World War II, as Allied forces liberated cities and towns in Western Europe, they were quickly followed by crews with projectors and propaganda films such as "Valley of the Tennessee" to be shown for free in local theaters. The Bureau created 26 short documentaries designed to introduce America to liberated and conquered nations.
-
Miss Indian American Collection
9 minutesSheridan Fulmer Public Library's Wyoming Room manager Kim Ostermyer showed items from Sheridan's Miss Indian American Collection and explained how the pageant competition helped improve relations between white and native citizens.
-
Lectures in History: Obama's 2004 DNC Keynote Address
1 hour, 2 minutesBarack Obama's keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention was the topic of a class taught by University of Kansas political communication professor Robert Rowland. The University of Kansas is in Lawrence, Kansas.
-
Reel America: "To Help Peace Survive" - 1974
29 minutesThis Defense Department orientation film for soldiers assigned to South Korea gives a brief history of Korea and details the events that led to the Korean War and its aftermath. After detailing the war and the armistice, the film describes what life is like for soldiers stationed there and argues that there is much to see and enjoy in the country.
-
Cable TV, Hollywood & Presidential Politics
50 minutesHistorian Kathryn Brownell talked about the rise of cable television and the mingling of Hollywood celebrity with politics, and how they've impacted presidential campaigns and the presidency itself. The Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan, hosted this program.
-
Reel America: "Valley of the Tennessee" - 1944
29 minutesThis 1944 film was made by the U.S. Office of War Information's Overseas Motion Picture Bureau. It details the history of the Tennessee Valley Authority, or TVA, which was founded in 1933 to address issues in energy, the environment, and economic development in Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, and Mississippi. During World War II, as Allied forces liberated cities and towns in Western Europe, they were quickly followed by crews with projectors and propaganda films such as "Valley of the Tennessee" to be shown for free in local theaters. The Bureau created 26 short documentaries designed to introduce America to liberated and conquered nations.
-
Miss Indian American Collection
10 minutesSheridan Fulmer Public Library's Wyoming Room manager Kim Ostermyer showed items from Sheridan's Miss Indian American Collection and explained how the pageant competition helped improve relations between white and native citizens.
-
The Civil War: Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg in Tennessee
1 hour, 0 minuteHistorian Cecily Zander discussed Confederate General Braxton Bragg, who achieved the most significant southern victory in the Western Theater at the 1863 Battle of Chickamauga but was later defeated by Union General Grant at Chattanooga that same year. The Emerging Civil War Symposium at Stevenson Ridge in Spotsylvania, Virginia, hosted this event.
-
African Americans in the Navy since the Civil War
1 hour, 15 minutesHistorians discussed the role and service of African Americans in the U.S. Navy and discrimination they faced. The Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital in Washington, DC, hosted this program.
-
Dr. Robert Johnson & Tennis Desegregation
11 minutesDr. Robert Johnson hosted a tennis camp at his home in Lynchburg, Virginia starting in the 1940s where he coached young African Americans including Althea Gibson and Arthur Ashe. Lange Johnson talked about his grandfather's work to integrate tennis and his own experiences at the camp.
-
Faith and the American Soldier During World War II
1 hour, 4 minutesFlorida State professor Kurt Piehler discussed how the U.S. military sought to meet the spiritual needs of the millions who served in uniform during World War II. The National World War II Museum in New Orleans hosted this event.
-
John McManus, "To the End of the Earth"
1 hour, 15 minutesThe U.S. victory over Japan in World War II was the topic of Missouri University of Science and Technology U.S. military history professor John McManus' book. This event was hosted by the St. Louis County Library in Missouri.
-
Reel America: "The Truth about Communism" - 1962
1 hour, 16 minutesThis 1962 film created by the National Education Program and narrated by Ronald Reagan detailed the history of communism. Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films produced mostly by government agencies.
-
Lectures in History: Obama's 2004 DNC Keynote Address
1 hour, 1 minuteBarack Obama's keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention was the topic of a class taught by University of Kansas political communication professor Robert Rowland. The University of Kansas is in Lawrence, Kansas.
-
Reel America: "To Help Peace Survive" - 1974
29 minutesThis Defense Department orientation film for soldiers assigned to South Korea gives a brief history of Korea and details the events that led to the Korean War and its aftermath. After detailing the war and the armistice, the film describes what life is like for soldiers stationed there and argues that there is much to see and enjoy in the country.
-
Cable TV, Hollywood & Presidential Politics
50 minutesHistorian Kathryn Brownell talked about the rise of cable television and the mingling of Hollywood celebrity with politics, and how they've impacted presidential campaigns and the presidency itself. The Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan, hosted this program.
-
Reel America: "Valley of the Tennessee" - 1944
29 minutesThis 1944 film was made by the U.S. Office of War Information's Overseas Motion Picture Bureau. It details the history of the Tennessee Valley Authority, or TVA, which was founded in 1933 to address issues in energy, the environment, and economic development in Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, and Mississippi. During World War II, as Allied forces liberated cities and towns in Western Europe, they were quickly followed by crews with projectors and propaganda films such as "Valley of the Tennessee" to be shown for free in local theaters. The Bureau created 26 short documentaries designed to introduce America to liberated and conquered nations.
-
Miss Indian American Collection
10 minutesSheridan Fulmer Public Library's Wyoming Room manager Kim Ostermyer showed items from Sheridan's Miss Indian American Collection and explained how the pageant competition helped improve relations between white and native citizens.
-
Lectures in History: Obama's 2004 DNC Keynote Address
1 hour, 2 minutesBarack Obama's keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention was the topic of a class taught by University of Kansas political communication professor Robert Rowland. The University of Kansas is in Lawrence, Kansas.
-
Reel America: "To Help Peace Survive" - 1974
28 minutesThis Defense Department orientation film for soldiers assigned to South Korea gives a brief history of Korea and details the events that led to the Korean War and its aftermath. After detailing the war and the armistice, the film describes what life is like for soldiers stationed there and argues that there is much to see and enjoy in the country.
-
Cable TV, Hollywood & Presidential Politics
51 minutesHistorian Kathryn Brownell talked about the rise of cable television and the mingling of Hollywood celebrity with politics, and how they've impacted presidential campaigns and the presidency itself. The Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan, hosted this program.
-
Reel America: "Valley of the Tennessee" - 1944
29 minutesThis 1944 film was made by the U.S. Office of War Information's Overseas Motion Picture Bureau. It details the history of the Tennessee Valley Authority, or TVA, which was founded in 1933 to address issues in energy, the environment, and economic development in Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, and Mississippi. During World War II, as Allied forces liberated cities and towns in Western Europe, they were quickly followed by crews with projectors and propaganda films such as "Valley of the Tennessee" to be shown for free in local theaters. The Bureau created 26 short documentaries designed to introduce America to liberated and conquered nations.
-
Miss Indian American Collection
10 minutesSheridan Fulmer Public Library's Wyoming Room manager Kim Ostermyer showed items from Sheridan's Miss Indian American Collection and explained how the pageant competition helped improve relations between white and native citizens.
-
The Civil War: Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg in Tennessee
1 hour, 0 minuteHistorian Cecily Zander discussed Confederate General Braxton Bragg, who achieved the most significant southern victory in the Western Theater at the 1863 Battle of Chickamauga but was later defeated by Union General Grant at Chattanooga that same year. The Emerging Civil War Symposium at Stevenson Ridge in Spotsylvania, Virginia, hosted this event.
-
African Americans in the Navy since the Civil War
1 hour, 15 minutesHistorians discussed the role and service of African Americans in the U.S. Navy and discrimination they faced. The Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital in Washington, DC, hosted this program.
-
Dr. Robert Johnson & Tennis Desegregation
11 minutesDr. Robert Johnson hosted a tennis camp at his home in Lynchburg, Virginia starting in the 1940s where he coached young African Americans including Althea Gibson and Arthur Ashe. Lange Johnson talked about his grandfather's work to integrate tennis and his own experiences at the camp.
-
Faith and the American Soldier During World War II
1 hour, 4 minutesFlorida State professor Kurt Piehler discussed how the U.S. military sought to meet the spiritual needs of the millions who served in uniform during World War II. The National World War II Museum in New Orleans hosted this event.
-
John McManus, "To the End of the Earth"
1 hour, 15 minutesThe U.S. victory over Japan in World War II was the topic of Missouri University of Science and Technology U.S. military history professor John McManus' book. This event was hosted by the St. Louis County Library in Missouri.
-
Reel America: "The Truth about Communism" - 1962
1 hour, 16 minutesThis 1962 film created by the National Education Program and narrated by Ronald Reagan detailed the history of communism. Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films produced mostly by government agencies.