Manage episode 520501043 series 3667008
A century of episodes calls for a wider lens, and we open it fully: the founding wasn’t just hammered out in halls and pamphlets by famous men—it was argued, nurtured, and lived by women whose ideas changed the course of American liberty. We pull threads from homes and letters into the political tapestry, showing how civic virtue took shape through family, education, economic agency, and public authorship.
We explore Abigail Adams’s push for legal and economic recognition within marriage and household management, Mercy Otis Warren’s “deep cut” anti-federalist critique that helped spur the Bill of Rights, and Phillis Wheatley’s poetry that challenged a nation to confront slavery while speaking the language of freedom. We highlight Martha Washington’s essential leadership in sustaining morale and discipline around the Continental Army, and Deborah Sampson’s service that tested assumptions about who could act as a citizen-soldier. Together, these lives reveal freedom as more than license; it is the disciplined pursuit of the common good.
Rather than treating the founding as a static canon of documents, we frame it as an active conversation. Yes, read the Constitution and Federalist Papers—but also bring in the anti-federalists and the overlooked correspondence where influence travels across friendship, marriage, and print culture. As America approaches 250 years, this broader view makes the era more vivid and useful: plays, poems, letters, and household decisions shaped policy and principle as surely as speeches and votes. If you’re a teacher, student, or curious reader, you’ll find practical ways to study these connections and restore the women who helped build the republic.
If this perspective expanded your view of the founding, follow the show, share this episode with a friend who loves history, and leave a quick review telling us which text changed your mind.
Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum!
Chapters
1. Setting The Stage: Episode 100 (00:00:00)
2. Defining Women’s Varied Civic Roles (00:01:43)
3. Case Studies: Adams, Warren, Wheatley, Washington (00:03:49)
4. Freedom As Pursuit Of The Good (00:06:05)
5. How To Read The Founding More Fully (00:07:26)
6. Mercy Otis Warren And The Bill Of Rights (00:09:10)
7. Finding Women’s Influence In Correspondence (00:11:06)
8. Broadening America 250: Celebrating Women (00:13:11)
107 episodes