C-SPAN 3 TV Schedule
Expand All-
The Civil War: Megan Bever, "At War with King Alcohol"
1 hour, 11 minutesMissouri Southern State University professor Megan Bever talked about the temperance movement and alcohol use by soldiers during the Civil War. This virtual program was hosted by the Center for Civil War Studies at Virginia Tech University.
-
Reel America: Desert Survival - 1944
39 minutesThis 1944 Army Air Forces film depicted the survival of the crew of a downed military aircraft in the desert. The soldiers learned methods of conserving water, providing shelter, and signaling for help. It was released as "Land and Live in the Desert." Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films.
-
Lectures in History: American Churches During WWI
1 hour, 11 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.
-
Lectures in History: Irish Catholics & Tammany Hall
1 hour, 16 minutesChristendom College professor Christopher Shannon taught a class about Irish Catholics and 19th century New York City politics, including the Tammany Hall organization. He showed both positive and negative portrayals of Irish Catholic immigrants in New York through Thomas Nast cartoons and other period sources.
-
Patrick Murphy, "The Irish in St. Louis"
1 hour, 3 minutesAuthor Patrick Murphy discussed St. Louis' earliest Irish immigrants and their complex assimilation story. The Missouri History Museum in St. Louis hosted this event.
-
Neal Thompson, "The First Kennedys"
1 hour, 26 minutesAuthor and journalist Neal Thompson recounts the first generation of Kennedys, Patrick and Bridget, who immigrated to the United States from Ireland in the mid-19th century. Their son P.J. was a Massachusetts state senator and great-grandfather to John F. Kennedy. This was a virtual program hosted by the Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston.
-
Lectures in History: 1863 New York City Draft Riots
36 minutesCity University of New York professor emeritus Joshua Brown taught a class on the 1863 New York City Draft Riots and Civil War newspapers. He described how citizens across the country saw drawings and read articles chronicling the events. This class was part of a National Endowment for the Humanities institute for college and university teachers hosted by the City University of New York Graduate Center.
-
Reel America: How Steel is Made - 1946
37 minutesThis 1946 Department of Interior film explained how steel is made and its importance to the expansion of cities and infrastructure. Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films produced mostly by government agencies.
-
Lectures in History: American Churches During WWI
1 hour, 11 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.
-
Lectures in History: Irish Catholics & Tammany Hall
1 hour, 16 minutesChristendom College professor Christopher Shannon taught a class about Irish Catholics and 19th century New York City politics, including the Tammany Hall organization. He showed both positive and negative portrayals of Irish Catholic immigrants in New York through Thomas Nast cartoons and other period sources.
-
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.
-
Neal Thompson, "The First Kennedys"
1 hour, 25 minutesAuthor and journalist Neal Thompson recounts the first generation of Kennedys, Patrick and Bridget, who immigrated to the United States from Ireland in the mid-19th century. Their son P.J. was a Massachusetts state senator and great-grandfather to John F. Kennedy. This was a virtual program hosted by the Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston.
-
Lectures in History: 1863 New York City Draft Riots
37 minutesCity University of New York professor emeritus Joshua Brown taught a class on the 1863 New York City Draft Riots and Civil War newspapers. He described how citizens across the country saw drawings and read articles chronicling the events. This class was part of a National Endowment for the Humanities institute for college and university teachers hosted by the City University of New York Graduate Center.
-
Reel America: How Steel is Made - 1946
36 minutesThis 1946 Department of Interior film explained how steel is made and its importance to the expansion of cities and infrastructure. Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films produced mostly by government agencies.
-
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.
-
Lectures in History: Irish Catholics & Tammany Hall
1 hour, 16 minutesChristendom College professor Christopher Shannon taught a class about Irish Catholics and 19th century New York City politics, including the Tammany Hall organization. He showed both positive and negative portrayals of Irish Catholic immigrants in New York through Thomas Nast cartoons and other period sources.
-
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.
-
Neal Thompson, "The First Kennedys"
1 hour, 24 minutesAuthor and journalist Neal Thompson recounts the first generation of Kennedys, Patrick and Bridget, who immigrated to the United States from Ireland in the mid-19th century. Their son P.J. was a Massachusetts state senator and great-grandfather to John F. Kennedy. This was a virtual program hosted by the Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston.
-
Lectures in History: 1863 New York City Draft Riots
37 minutesCity University of New York professor emeritus Joshua Brown taught a class on the 1863 New York City Draft Riots and Civil War newspapers. He described how citizens across the country saw drawings and read articles chronicling the events. This class was part of a National Endowment for the Humanities institute for college and university teachers hosted by the City University of New York Graduate Center.
-
Reel America: How Steel is Made - 1946
37 minutesThis 1946 Department of Interior film explained how steel is made and its importance to the expansion of cities and infrastructure. Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films produced mostly by government agencies.
-
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.
-
Lectures in History: Irish Catholics & Tammany Hall
1 hour, 15 minutesChristendom College professor Christopher Shannon taught a class about Irish Catholics and 19th century New York City politics, including the Tammany Hall organization. He showed both positive and negative portrayals of Irish Catholic immigrants in New York through Thomas Nast cartoons and other period sources.
-
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.
-
Neal Thompson, "The First Kennedys"
1 hour, 25 minutesAuthor and journalist Neal Thompson recounts the first generation of Kennedys, Patrick and Bridget, who immigrated to the United States from Ireland in the mid-19th century. Their son P.J. was a Massachusetts state senator and great-grandfather to John F. Kennedy. This was a virtual program hosted by the Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston.