C-SPAN 3 TV Schedule
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Dorothy & Thomas Hoobler, "Are You Prepared for the Storm of Love Making?"
56 minutesPresidential love letters revealed little known sides of our chief executives in a book titled "Are You Prepared for the Storm of Love Making? Letters of Love and Lust from the White House." Politics and Prose bookstore in Washington, DC, hosted this event.
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James Swanson, "Manhunt" Apple TV+ Series
57 minutes"Manhunt" author James Swanson talked about the Apple TV+ series based on his account of the 12-day search for President Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth. American History TV interviewed Mr. Swanson at the Surratt House Museum in Maryland, where the assassin made a hurried stop for supplies after shooting Mr. Lincoln during an April 14, 1865, performance at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C.
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Lectures in History: Army Explorers of the West
1 hour, 18 minutesTexas Woman's University history professor Cecily Zander discussed the federal government's efforts to explore and control the American west from the early 1800's through the Civil War. Texas Woman's University is located in Denton.
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Reel America: History of Radio - 1958
22 minutesThis 1958 National Association of Broadcasters' film depicted the history of radio and the role it has played in American life. It was released as "Hear and Now." Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films.
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Cliff Sloan, "The Court at War"
1 hour, 0 minuteWhat was FDR's relationship with the Supreme Court he created -- having appointed seven of nine justices -- and did the court reflect his wartime vision? Author Cliff Sloan provided some answers. He is a constitutional law and criminal justice professor at Georgetown University Law Center.
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Jason Bohm, "Washington's Marines"
1 hour, 6 minutesAuthor and U.S. Marine Corps Major General Jason Bohm talked about the origins of the Marine Corps, including strategic decisions that shaped the formation of the Continental Marines in the Revolutionary War. The Virginia Museum of History and Culture hosted this event.
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The Life of Andrew Haswell Green
1 hour, 22 minutesHarry Albert of theWorcester Historical Museum, talked about the life and legacy of Andrew Haswell Green, the "Father of Greater New York." Haswell lived in the late 19th century and was largely responsible for Central Park, the New York Public Library, and the Metropolitan Museums of Art and Natural History, among other projects. Preservation Worcester in Massachusetts hosted this event.
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Phillip Dodd, "An American Renaissance"
1 hour, 0 minuteAuthor Phillip Dodd discussed the finest examples of Beaux-Arts Architecture associated with the opulence of the Gilded Age (1877-1920) and the stories of those who commissioned, designed, and built them. The Greenwich Historical Society in Cos Cob, Connecticut, hosted this event.
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Lectures in History: Army Explorers of the West
1 hour, 18 minutesTexas Woman's University history professor Cecily Zander discussed the federal government's efforts to explore and control the American west from the early 1800's through the Civil War. Texas Woman's University is located in Denton.
-
Reel America: History of Radio - 1958
20 minutesThis 1958 National Association of Broadcasters' film depicted the history of radio and the role it has played in American life. It was released as "Hear and Now." Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films.
-
Cliff Sloan, "The Court at War"
1 hour, 0 minuteWhat was FDR's relationship with the Supreme Court he created -- having appointed seven of nine justices -- and did the court reflect his wartime vision? Author Cliff Sloan provided some answers. He is a constitutional law and criminal justice professor at Georgetown University Law Center.
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Jason Bohm, "Washington's Marines"
1 hour, 8 minutesAuthor and U.S. Marine Corps Major General Jason Bohm talked about the origins of the Marine Corps, including strategic decisions that shaped the formation of the Continental Marines in the Revolutionary War. The Virginia Museum of History and Culture hosted this event.
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The Life of Andrew Haswell Green
1 hour, 24 minutesHarry Albert of theWorcester Historical Museum, talked about the life and legacy of Andrew Haswell Green, the "Father of Greater New York." Haswell lived in the late 19th century and was largely responsible for Central Park, the New York Public Library, and the Metropolitan Museums of Art and Natural History, among other projects. Preservation Worcester in Massachusetts hosted this event.
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Phillip Dodd, "An American Renaissance"
1 hour, 0 minuteAuthor Phillip Dodd discussed the finest examples of Beaux-Arts Architecture associated with the opulence of the Gilded Age (1877-1920) and the stories of those who commissioned, designed, and built them. The Greenwich Historical Society in Cos Cob, Connecticut, hosted this event.
-
Lectures in History: Army Explorers of the West
1 hour, 18 minutesTexas Woman's University history professor Cecily Zander discussed the federal government's efforts to explore and control the American west from the early 1800's through the Civil War. Texas Woman's University is located in Denton.
-
Reel America: History of Radio - 1958
21 minutesThis 1958 National Association of Broadcasters' film depicted the history of radio and the role it has played in American life. It was released as "Hear and Now." Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films.
-
Cliff Sloan, "The Court at War"
1 hour, 0 minuteWhat was FDR's relationship with the Supreme Court he created -- having appointed seven of nine justices -- and did the court reflect his wartime vision? Author Cliff Sloan provided some answers. He is a constitutional law and criminal justice professor at Georgetown University Law Center.
-
Jason Bohm, "Washington's Marines"
1 hour, 7 minutesAuthor and U.S. Marine Corps Major General Jason Bohm talked about the origins of the Marine Corps, including strategic decisions that shaped the formation of the Continental Marines in the Revolutionary War. The Virginia Museum of History and Culture hosted this event.
-
The Life of Andrew Haswell Green
1 hour, 22 minutesHarry Albert of theWorcester Historical Museum, talked about the life and legacy of Andrew Haswell Green, the "Father of Greater New York." Haswell lived in the late 19th century and was largely responsible for Central Park, the New York Public Library, and the Metropolitan Museums of Art and Natural History, among other projects. Preservation Worcester in Massachusetts hosted this event.
-
Phillip Dodd, "An American Renaissance"
1 hour, 0 minuteAuthor Phillip Dodd discussed the finest examples of Beaux-Arts Architecture associated with the opulence of the Gilded Age (1877-1920) and the stories of those who commissioned, designed, and built them. The Greenwich Historical Society in Cos Cob, Connecticut, hosted this event.
-
Lectures in History: Army Explorers of the West
1 hour, 18 minutesTexas Woman's University history professor Cecily Zander discussed the federal government's efforts to explore and control the American west from the early 1800's through the Civil War. Texas Woman's University is located in Denton.
-
Reel America: History of Radio - 1958
19 minutesThis 1958 National Association of Broadcasters' film depicted the history of radio and the role it has played in American life. It was released as "Hear and Now." Reel America is an American History TV series featuring 20th century archival films.
-
Cliff Sloan, "The Court at War"
1 hour, 0 minuteWhat was FDR's relationship with the Supreme Court he created -- having appointed seven of nine justices -- and did the court reflect his wartime vision? Author Cliff Sloan provided some answers. He is a constitutional law and criminal justice professor at Georgetown University Law Center.
-
Jason Bohm, "Washington's Marines"
1 hour, 10 minutesAuthor and U.S. Marine Corps Major General Jason Bohm talked about the origins of the Marine Corps, including strategic decisions that shaped the formation of the Continental Marines in the Revolutionary War. The Virginia Museum of History and Culture hosted this event.
-
The Life of Andrew Haswell Green
1 hour, 22 minutesHarry Albert of theWorcester Historical Museum, talked about the life and legacy of Andrew Haswell Green, the "Father of Greater New York." Haswell lived in the late 19th century and was largely responsible for Central Park, the New York Public Library, and the Metropolitan Museums of Art and Natural History, among other projects. Preservation Worcester in Massachusetts hosted this event.