The History of the Americans
Jack Henneman
The history of the people who live in the United States, from the beginning.
Episodes
Mentioned books
Dec 24, 2023 • 39min
#136 The “Plundering Time” Of Maryland Part 2
While the first English Civil War rages, Leonard Calvert returns to the Chesapeake in September 1644, after having been away for a bit more than a year. He carries commissions from Charles I to seize “London” assets in Virginia and collect a duty on tobacco for the Crown. The Royalists who run the royal colony of Virginia refuse to support Calvert and their king because they are too busy fighting the Powhatans to divide their own ranks. Meanwhile, Richard Ingle and his ship Reformation return to the Chesapeake, where he learns that Leonard Calvert has threatened to hang him if he comes to Maryland. Ingle, however, bears a letter of marque from Parliament that he interprets as a license to steal from Catholics.
So, naturally, this means war. A comical war, to be sure, and almost bloodless except for three Jesuits who end up in the wrong place at the wrong time. But a war nonetheless.
Ingle recruits some “rascally fellows,” and essentially conquers Maryland with the support of the colony’s Protestants. Leonard Calvert flees, and the Protestants install their own government at St. Mary’s City. To all appearances, the Calverts had been expelled from Maryland. All appearances, it would turn out, would be deceiving. The Calverts would recover Maryland within 18 months, and Ingle would die a pauper.
And so it is that the University of Maryland football team bears the Calvert family crest on its helmets.
X/Twitter: @TheHistoryOfTh2
Facebook: The History of the Americans Podcast
Selected references for this episode
The “Plundering Time” of Maryland Part 1
Timothy B. Riordan, The Plundering Time: Maryland and the English Civil War, 1645–1646
Podcast: Rejects and Revolutionaries, “English Civil War 7: The Plundering Time”
Dec 11, 2023 • 36min
#135 The “Plundering Time” Of Maryland Part 1
This is the first of two episodes that recounts Maryland’s “Plundering Time,” when the English Civil War spilled into the Chesapeake. Protestants would rebel against Catholics, and Richard Ingle, a Protestant merchant-trader who had been the principal commercial link between the early Maryland colony and England, would loot the colony and almost put an end to the Calverts’ rule there. This episode is the prelude to that ugly and also comical moment. It was, ultimately, a farce of impulsivity and ego that almost redrew the map of the future United States.
X/Twitter: @TheHistoryOfTh2
Facebook: The History of the Americans Podcast
Selected references for this episode
That Time Maryland and Virginia Went to War
Timothy B. Riordan, The Plundering Time: Maryland and the English Civil War, 1645–1646
Manfred Jonas, “The Claiborne-Calvert Controversy: An Episode in the Colonization of North America,” Jahrbuch für Amerikastudien, 1966.
First English Civil War (Wikipedia)
Podcast: Rejects and Revolutionaries, “English Civil War 7: The Plundering Time”
Nov 23, 2023 • 37min
#134 Sidebar: More Notes on Thanksgiving
This episode will be easier to follow if you have recently listened to our previous Thanksgiving Sidebar, “Notes on Thanksgiving.”
Thanksgiving is less historically genuine than many Americans were led to believe. The Thanksgiving story, as it was long taught in school, was constructed to achieve a purpose: the unification of an increasingly diverse country around a national story. It worked incredibly well. Italians, Irish, eastern Europeans, and other immigrants who arrived in the late 19th and early 20th century learned a version of our national origin story in a celebration of community that brought the country together when it very much needed it. But that success came at a price – it could and did alienate at least some of our people who were descended from North America’s indigenous peoples, including especially tribes of New England. The success of Thanksgiving in binding together an ever more diverse country and the alienation of people who do not celebrate the European settlement of North America is the story of this episode.
X (Twitter): @TheHistoryOfTh2
Facebook: The History of the Americans Podcast
Selected references for this episode
Sidebar: Notes on Thanksgiving (Encore Presentation)
Elizabeth Pleck, “The Making of the Domestic Occasion: The History of Thanksgiving in the United States,” Journal of Social History, Summer 1999.
Jana Weiss, “The National Day of Mourning: Thanksgiving, Civil Religion, and American Indians,” Amerikastudien / American Studies, 2018.
Christopher Hitchens, “The Turkey Has Landed,” The Wall Street Journal, November 23, 2005.
Freedom from Want
The Mayflower Compact
Occupation of Alcatraz
National Day of Mourning
Red Power Movement
The Nation, “Should America Keep Celebrating Thanksgiving?”
James Lee West, “A Native American Reflects on Thanksgiving”
Nov 16, 2023 • 33min
#133 Opechancanough’s Last Stand
It is early spring 1644, and Europeans are fighting Indians in New Netherland and Maryland. In Virginia, though, it is quiet. It has been twelve years since the Second Anglo-Powhatan war ended after a decade of fighting that began the day the sky fell, March 22, 1622. On that date Opechancanough sprung his colony-wide ambush of the English settlements along the James. Indian soldiers loyal to the Powhatan confederacy killed almost four hundred English and other European settlers on that day, and many more in the years that followed. But peace had come in 1632, and despite occasional crises that might have triggered war, the old chief had kept that peace. We covered Opechancanough and the Second Anglo-Powhatan War in three episodes more than a year ago, “Who Was Opechancanough?,” “Opechancanough’s War,” and “After the Sky Fell,” which are definitely useful background if you have not listened to them, or haven’t listened to them in some time.
The peace would end on April 18, 1644, and that is the story of this episode.
X (Twitter): @TheHistoryOfTh2
Facebook: The History of the Americans Podcast
Selected references for this episode
James Horn, A Brave and Cunning Prince: The Great Chief Opechancanough and the War for America
Helen C. Rountree, Pocahontas, Powhatan, Opechancanough: Three Indian Lives Changed by Jamestown
Robert Beverley, The History & Present State of Virginia
Nov 6, 2023 • 52min
#132 Sidebar Conversation: Salina Baker on the Life of General Nathanael Greene
Salina Baker lives in Austin – my town – and has just published “The Line of Splendor,” a biographical novel of the life of General Nathanael Greene, regarded by most historians as George Washington’s most important lieutenant. We talk about Greene’s life, his famous Southern Campaign in 1781 in which he and his men drove the British out of the Carolinas and Georgia while losing most of the battles they actually fought, his stint as Washington’s quartermaster general and his talent for logistics, his friendship with fellow boy-wonder Henry Knox, and what might have been had Greene not died shortly after the end of the war. Buy her novel through the link below!
Also, if you are going to be in Denver on November 12, let me know if you can make the meet-up we’ll do late that afternoon, probably at or new the Brown Palace Hotel.
Subscribe by email
X (Twitter): @TheHistoryOfTh2
Facebook: The History of the Americans Podcast
Salina B. Baker, The Line of Splendor: A Novel of Nathanael Greene and the American Revolution
Oct 31, 2023 • 33min
#131 The Furry Geopolitics of the Eastern Seaboard 1630s-1660s
The goal of this “high altitude” episode is to establish a framework for forthcoming episodes covering the period between roughly 1640 and 1670. We look at the geopolitical landscape in the territories of today’s northeastern United States and eastern Canada in the middle 17th century. The key players are the European settlers – English, French, Dutch, and Swedish – and the most important Indian nations – the Susquehannocks, the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy, the Leni Lenapes, and the Hurons. They fiercely competed over the trade in fur, from the European point of view, and manufactured consumer products and weapons, from the Indian point of view. There would be blood.
Subscribe by email
X (Twitter): @TheHistoryOfTh2
Facebook: The History of the Americans Podcast
Selected references for this episode
Eric Jay Dolin, Fur, Fortune, and Empire: The Epic History of the Fur Trade in America
Bernard Bailyn, The Barbarous Years: The Peopling of British North America–The Conflict of Civilizations, 1600-1675
Francis Jennings, “Glory, Death, and Transfiguration: The Susquehannock Indians in the Seventeenth Century,” Proceedings of the American Philosophic Society, February 1968
Oct 16, 2023 • 37min
#130 Willem Kieft’s War
It is the early 1640s. The Dutch, who have done their level best to foster good relations with the local Indians because war isn’t good for business, have a new governor in charge at New Amsterdam. Willem Kieft is a man of extraordinary ego and bad judgment, a coward and a weasel. Kieft launches an incredibly violent war with the many tribes on and around Manhattan on a tissue-thin pretext. The bloodletting is shockingly wasteful and sad, even across the years. In the end, he turns to John Underhill, the Puritan captain who led the forces of the Massachusetts Bay against the Pequots years before. The results are every bit as ugly. The episode ends with a story about a stonemason named John Ogden, without whom you would not be listening to this podcast.
Subscribe by email
Twitter: @TheHistoryOfTh2
Facebook: The History of the Americans Podcast
Selected references for this episode
Russell Shorto, The Island at the Center of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony That Shaped America
J. Franklin Jameson, Narratives of New Netherland 1609-1664
Donna Merwick, The Shame and the Sorrow: Dutch-Amerindian Encounters in New Netherland
Katherine A. Grandjean, “The Long Wake of the Pequot War,” Early American Studies, Spring 2011.
Nicholas Klaiber, “Kieft’s War and Tributary Politics in Eastern Woodland Colonial Society”
Walter Giersbach, “Governor Kieft’s Personal War,” Military History Online.
Oct 9, 2023 • 38min
#129 Sidebar: Columbus Counterfactuals Revised
As has become our tradition around Columbus Day, we speculate on various might-have-beens – for example, what if Columbus had sailed for a different monarch? – and some of the consequences of Columbus’s voyages for humanity writ large. This episode has been revised and re-recorded from those of previous years, and includes some thoughts on “Indigenous Peoples Day,” offered by some jurisdictions (and this year as a Presidential proclamation) as a counterpoint.
The image for this episode on the website post is of maize growing in Africa.
Subscribe by email (or on any podcast app)
X (Twitter): @TheHistoryOfTh2
Facebook: The History of the Americans Podcast
Selected references for this episode
Samuel Eliot Morison, Admiral of the Ocean Sea: A Life of Christopher Columbus
Alfred W. Crosby, Jr., The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492
Nathan Nunn and Nancy Qian, “The Columbian Exchange: A History of Disease, Food, and Ideas”
Charles C. Mann, 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created
Noble David Cook, Born To Die: Disease and New World Conquest, 1492–1650
Oct 3, 2023 • 11min
#128 Philadelphia Area Meet-up Details and a Book Recommendation
The main purpose of this micro-episode is to give you the details on the much ballyhooed Philadelphia area meet-up of fans of the podcast. The date is this Friday, October 6, 2023. The place will be Neshaminy Creek Brewing Company, 909 Ray Avenue, Croydon, Pennsylvania. The official start-time is 5:00 pm, but if you can’t get there so early rest assured that I’ll be around until at least 7:30, and certainly as late as the conversation remains fun and interesting. I’ll aim to get there at 4:30 or so to check out the room I reserved, which I believe they call “the nook.” I trust many of you will recognize me from my photo on the website or on Twitter or Facebook, but in case not I’ll be wearing a red “History Nerd” cap.
I also read a short excerpt from Yascha Mounk’s new book The Identity Trap: A Story of Ideas and Power in Our Time, which I highly recommend. Mounk explores the philosophical roots of critical theory and the full range of ideas clumsily lumped together as “wokeism,” or “the successor ideology.” The book is extremely useful for understanding how we arrived at our current identity politics, and is relevant to understanding the “history wars” that have played out over the last four or five years. You can buy it through the link above.
Sep 21, 2023 • 43min
#128 Sidebar: The Comstock Act, Free Speech and the Legalization of Birth Control
Margaret Sanger, famous advocate for lawful birth control, joins the podcast to discuss the campaign to legalize speech about birth control in the 1920s and 1930s. Topics include the relevance of the Comstock Act, mixed motives of birth control advocates, early expansion of free expression, and organizations staying true to their mission while avoiding credibility issues.


