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tv   [untitled]    June 2, 2012 1:00pm-1:30pm EDT

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and there was talk with the city preservationists, because of earl browder's connections of moving it to save it. but it proved to be so dilapidated, they were unable to save it. he was born in 1891. he had -- his family was fairly poor. and so as an early boy, he had to start working, and he was a messenger at several places in wichita, including the western union, the union national bank and a drugstore. and at age 16, he began reading carl marx. and it was here in wichita, he went to the forum, which is the forerunner of our century to today, and he heard eugene debs, who was then the socialist party leader, talk about socialism, and he became so moved that he began selling the appeal to
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reason. it was the nation's largest socialist newspaper in the time. and it was published here in kansas. at that time, there was a huge, diverse economic dichotomy going on. you had the very, very wealthy, and you had the very, very poor. and the browder family was certainly among the very poor. and the socialist movement at that time offered hope. what happened was world war i broke out. and rather than serve in the military, he went to prison. and -- when he got out of prison, he then helped organize the communist party in the nation, and went during the 1920s to china and helped organize the chinese communist party. and then he came back and was the general secretary of the
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communist party here in the nation. ran for president in 1936 and 1940, against fdr. did not receive any votes from wichitans. this is before world war ii. and so it didn't have quite the negative overtones that it does today. in 1936, earl browder said that the united states is economically ready for commun m communism, but it's politicly not ready. >> events and issues are kbing beginning to stand out so they can be seen. you don't have to give long-winded explanations anymore. people see that people understand, what they need is a voice to express it for them. and an organization to rally them. and the people are going to march forward.
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>> he advocated for merging the united states and the soviet communist parties. and, in fact, that's what caused stalin to kick him out of the communist party. during the 1950s, he was brought before the senate foreign relations committee with joe mccarthy, and had to answer questions, and he refused to. he refused to name names, and was once again put in prison. he died in 1973 at the age of 82. he was not afraid to show his beliefs. he wasn't afraid to stand down, no matter what the consequences were. he was in and out of prison right and left. there weren't many like that at that time. >> unity or progress against reactionary forces threaten to rise. unity that rises above the differences of race, religion and ideology. unity to bring the century of the common man. this is the golden rule for all
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the democratic camp in which the trade unions occupy a central place. this rule says an emphatic no to the proposition that we should erect special discriminations against communists as some kind of menace. spend the weekend in wichita, kansas with book tv and american history tv. today at noon eastern, literary life with book tv on c-span 2. robert weems on american presidents and blank entrepreneurs from business in black and white. and dennis farney in the the barn stormer and the lady. also browse the book collection and rare books. and sunday at 5:00 p.m. eastern on american history tv, experience early plains life at the old kowtow museum. the early days of flight at the kansas aviation museum. also, two participants from the kansas civil rights movement. in 1958, they sat down for
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service at the dockem drugstore. once a month, c-span's local content vehicles explore the history and literary life of cities across america. this weekend from wichita, kansas on c-span 2 and 3. next author and history professor david hackette fischer discusses the tactics and strategies that george washington used to confront challenges. he spoke at a university of oklahoma symposium on the mounding of america. this is 50 minutes. good morning. how are the acoustics? loud and clear? i have two mikes on me. i think that might be one too many. i'm here to tell you a story you heard before. we're going to talk about george
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washington. and in light of the frame that everybody else has been bringing to this occasion, that is the troubles of our time, i wanted to talk about washington and some of the troubles of his time and how he dealt with it. and i want to do it by story telling. the great attraction for me to history are these wonderful stories. i think of arthur snobl who sat down to play beethoven and he stopped and turned to the audience and said, this music is better than it can ever be played. i think that's the way it is with these stories. they are better than they can ever be told. i want to do that also with regard to a picture that you've seen before. this is washington crossing the delaware. and next time you're in new york city, go to the metropolitan museum of art. they have just opened a new american wing. it's gigantic. it's 60 galleries of american
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painting. just opened a couple weeks ago. and at the center of it is this painting. when i visited, my wife and i always go there whenever we're in new york. in the olden setting, there's always seats in front of the painting and the seats were always full. one day i was there and the seats were filled with japanese tourists. they were getting a lecture in japanese and they were absolutely riveted on this. this image even said that our constitution is not traveling as well as it used to be doing, some of these stories are traveling very well. we have sold the translation rights to washington's crossing in croatian. i was invited to lecture in china, and discovered a volume ii edition of my book in mandarin chinese that my
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publishers did not know about. and it gives a new meaning to freedom spreading through the world. but what i want to do is to invite you to look closely at this painting and to think about what's going on there. this was emanuel leutze's work. he was a german immigrant to america. he went back to study painting in germany. and then after the failure of the revolution of 1848, he did this painting to inspire liberals in europe primarily with the revolution that succeeded against long odds. and then he came to america and the painting began to travel here as well. americans love to celebrate this painting and they also love to debunk it. the americans were debunking in 1922. this inspires some really world class debunking.
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people have gone through this painting and they observed all the obvious problems and others that are not so. you will see washington not only standing in the boat, to which there's much discussion, but standing precariously on one leg. i just got a letter from a reader who was an expert on swords. and the sword is correct. it was a presentation sword to washington that leutze was allowed to borrow for the occasion. but the expert on swords said he made a mistake. it's buckled on backwards. the man behind him is james monroe. he was lieutenant of infantry and was in this event. but he is struggling to held up an american flag that 00 been invented yet. it would be coming in 1777. there are many people in the boat who inspired some debunking.
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there is that interesting figure bending over an oar in the long red shirt in the foreground, behind -- just behind the flag. and i got a letter from a radical feminist debunker. and i had speculated in my book as to whether that was a woman. it might well have been a woman. there were many women in these armies. general howe kept records and 10% of his armies were women on the ration. and it was probably something like that number at least in the later stages of the war for the american army. but the feminist said about that person, yes, it is a woman. and look again. she's the only person in the boat who is actually rowing.
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there's some interesting things that are going on here. just a word about george washington. this was a man who came from a very special part of america. it was called the northern neck of virginia. it was the land between the potomac rivers. the potomac and the rappahannock rivers. it extended a very great distance. and yet was largely owned by one aristocratic family who took up residents there. the fairfax family. its size was such a magnitude that in the early years, it was measured in degrees of longitude. it covered 3 degrees of longitude. this was a world in which george washington grew up. it was very top down. after the death of his father, the men in the fairfax family were his mentors. they raised him in that tradition of that society. a hierarchical society.
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he was a slave owner and not only a slave owner, he was a slave driver. we have accounts of washington actually whipping his own slaves with his hand. and before the war, he showed no sign of discomfort with his role with respect to slavery. he was also a man who aspired to a military career and he modelled his idea of military leadership on british officers with whom he served in the french and indian war. so in all those three ways, this was very hierarchical in this world that he grew up in. then the continental congress appointed him to be commander in chief of the american forces. and he turned to patrick henry at the back of the room and he said, depend upon it mr. henry, for the moment i take command, you may take the ruin of my reputation.
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he was sure it would be big trouble. and it was when he went to new england and met an army that was mostly of massachusetts and connecticut, rhode island, new hampshire men. he took an instant dislike to each other. he wrote home about new england as if he was visiting a foreign country. he said they are a nasty and a dirty people. quote, unquote. he said they are a leveling people. and he thought they had no discipline, no order. they did not approve of washington and his heirs. they wrote many verses of yankee doodle, which are not sung by children today, which were about washington -- captain washington they called him -- and his slapping stallion. there was a great distance at the very start between washington and these men.
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and it grew more difficult as more men joined that army and it began a national army, at least through at least ten of the former colonies. and the back country riflemen arrived in cambridge, massachusetts. you can see one at the stern of the boat and another wearing, i think, more of a 19th century fashion coonskin cap behind washington himself. and then just in the bell of the boat, you'll see a man who is a former slave himself, who was in the marble head mariners. he had become a seaman. you can see him wearing his tar pull and jacket. and a good many of those back country riflemen who came from virginia had been slave holders themselves. and when these two groups met each other in cambridge, there were words of abuse and insults
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and blows and then suddenly there was a riot that was larger than the battle at lexington when the revolution began. and washington rode on to the scene with the man who accompanied him through the war, it was his slave who was always riding with him. billy lee. both brilliant horsemen. they rode into the middle of this riot. we have eyewitness accounts. and the eyewitness tells us that washington leaped off his horse, threw his reigns to william lee, grabbed the rifleman in one hand and a new englander in another and in the word of the source, he, quotes, spoke with him, end quote. suddenly, there was silence on that field and then the riflemen and the new englanders ran off in all directions and washington had survived one of the first tests. but then other tests followed. there were gentlemen in virginia
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who joined as what kipling called gentlemen rankers. this was from maryland, but bending over the gunnels of the boat just under the sword is a man who is some of affluence, he's wearing an oiled hat and something like a raincoat and we can just barely make out the facings of his uniform under that jacket. he belonged to a small woods maryland regiment, which was recruited from maryland, and when they joined they insisted on signing a contract and the contract said they were enlisting not as privates, but as gentlemen. if anything that was done to them was a reflection on their honor in any way, they reserve the right to go home. and then behind them are some men from pennsylvania in those
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very plain blanket coats as they were called. and they were pennsylvania farmers and they were pennsylvania associators. and they believed very much in equality. they organized committees of privates and sergeants to tell their officers what to do. and all of these men came together to form an army. they also all believed they were there because they believed in a cause. they called it the cause. but they had very different ideas of what the cause was about. always two words were used. liberty and freedom. but those words had very different meanings. the back country riflemen, not in this version but actually in the hunting shirts that they wore, actually had in large letters across their chests "don't tread on me, give me liberty."
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their model was patrick henry. and it was one of the strongest expressions of liberty as an individual right that peter was talking about. but the people who came from massachusetts thought in terms of the liberty of their towns of the right of belonging to communities of free people. and they had a much more communal sense, a social sense of liberty. very different from these back countrymen. the people who came from virginia chose for their symbol of liberty the goddess of liberty, the roman goddess. and edwin burke said liberty was a kind of rank. some had much liberty, others not as much, and more than a few had none at all. and in other parts of this -- the people from pennsylvania already had a symbol of liberty,
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which was that great bell, as it was called the quaker bell sometimes. 1751. it wasn't called the liberty bell until the 19th century, but liberty was at its very heart, and around the crown of the bell in 1751 there was a verse from leviticus that was proclaim liberty throughout the land to all the inhabitants thereof. this was an idea of universal liberty. of reciprocal rights of extending to other people the rights that one claimed for themselves. there were four versions of the cause and all of them were in that boat. and all of them were grounded in different senses of a kind of social order. and it was washington's job to lead them. and he had some success in the first campaign, which was in boston and drove general gage out of the city of boston, the town of boston. and then he moved his army to new york and they knew this
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would be the great test in the summer of 1776. this was the moment when britain, one of the great powers in the world, greater than ever before after their victories in the last war, decided they would make their maximum effort to break the american rebellion, as they called it. and they sent, counting both sailors and soldiers, something like 60,000 men to new york harbor. their purpose was to capture new york and then to begin to recover the colonies one by one. and they were commanded by two brothers, william howell and robert howell -- william howell commanded the navy. and it was the largest projection of sea board power over a longer distance than any other than in the modern period. it was also the largest force that britain put into the field
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during the entire span of the revolutionary war, which lasted longer than the civil war in our participation, world war ii combined. eight years. washington's job under orders from the continental congress was to defend new york city, which he really felt to be indefensible, particularly as the british commanded the sea. what followed was a total disaster for american arms. absolutely everything went wrong. one thing that went wrong was the health of the army. there was no camp discipline. in the civil war for every soldier killed at battle, one died of disease. in world war i, it was about one to one. in the american revolution, the ratio was 8 to 1. 8 deaths from disease to 1 in combat. and that was for the british armies and the americans were
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much worse and washington's army began to waste away in the summer of 1776. and then the next failure was a failure of intelligence. the british were very skilled at that. they built a network of american loyalists and they knew of much more about what was going on in new york than washington did, and he was taken by surprise again and again and his army was defeated with only a few small victories to claim. and the worst of it, it continued until november of 1776. and the worst of it happened when a large part of washington's army was surrounded at fort washington, which was at the northern tip of manhattan. the closeters today. washington was across the hudson river in new jersey watching as that army was defeated and forced to surrender and then worse than that, after the men surrendered particularly those
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riflemen who had been shooting the officers of the british forces, a good many of those riflemen were beaten up and some of them were put to the sword as washington watched helplessly from the other side of the hudson. the palisades. washington irving, who wrote one of the first and i think one of the best biographies interviewed the people that were there. they told him that washington burst into tears of helplessness and frustration. it was the lowest point of what had happened. he had been responsible for that. it was his decision to defend that indefensible fort. and he began, and others around him, to wonder if this man was up to his job. and there were grave thoughts that maybe he would have to be replaced.
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and then he led his men in retreat across new jersey west toward pennsylvania, and he asked lieutenant monroe to stand by the edge of the road in newark, new jersey, and count the troops as they went by. there were 3,000 of them left. he started with about 30,000 men. he lost nearly 90% of the army under his command. and he was beginning to despair. he wrote home to his family and he said prepare to move everything into the mountains. he told them that he thought that the game just might be about up. but as they marched across new jersey, followed in a distance by british army, cornwallis now in the field, something happened amongst these men. somehow washington dug into the reserves of his character and found the strength to try again.
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and he had with him another extraordinary figure, who was a journalist, as we would say embedded in the continental army. it was thomas payne. the soldiers liked him. he soldiered beside them in that campaign. they called him the common sense man. and as they were in their camps retreating in new jersey, he decided that it was time to write another pamphlet called "the american crisis." this was the one about the times that try men's soul. it was truly so. and this was one of the first literate armies in history. they read these writings of thomas payne and it helped to remind them of that cause. and of its importance. even as they weren't all of one mind as to what it meant. so washington led his forces across the delaware, gathering
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all the boats as he crossed, and then he began to try to reorganize the army to try to undertake and invent a new way of leadership. he wrote back home. he said he discovered something with these new england men. he said he discovered "people unaccustomed to restraint cannot be drove. they must be led." quote, unquote. and so he undertook to invent a way of leading. the first thing he did was to work with his counsels of war. they had been very difficult bodies before. this was normal in those armies. 18th century areas. in a british army, a counsel of war was where a commander told his subordinates what to do, and they did it. in america it was a little more complicated than that. washington had often fluctuated between that very authoritarian style he grew up with and then
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the continental congress ordered him to consult with his other officers. which he undertook to do. and it was not very successful at first. but then they worked out a way of doing it. nathanael greene, his chief lieutenant, was sent to the continental congress, and in december, they worked out an understanding, first of all, that the continental congress would be the supreme body representing the sovereignty of the people in america. and the generals would obey. but the generals would be allowed to get on with the war. and that was a very unstable compromise, but in a rough way, it worked. then washington also worked out a way in which his counsels at war, unlike the british counsels, were very open. anybody could come in. many other civilians were invited. and washington cultivated two gifts that i think were critical to his leadership. first, he had the gift of listening. he was beginning to learn to
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listen to these people in his army. and the other was that he had the gift of silence. he could keep quiet about his own opinions and reserve his views until the discussion had pretty much run its course. then he would intervene and nobody was in doubt as to who was running the army, but he chose to run it by that open way. and then he went about business of reordering intelligence. and he did it by creating an open system of intelligence. he ordered all of his senior officers, his general officers, to run their own agents, to build their own networks, but to stay in touch and to tell him what they were finding. and so unlike other systems in which intelligence was very tightly held as an instrument of power, washington distributed the process of intelligence through his army. he built a new system of
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logistics in november and december, and he did it not as a kind of chain of logistics, but as a web in which most of the now states of the union were involved. and it was deliberately designed in that web-like form because it meant that if one piece of it broke, the other pieces could still function, and that's what happened. and this was a hugely difficult job that washington himself had to run. his published papers will run to more than 100 volumes and even this virginia collection is only a selection. and 75% of those papers are military papers, but most of them are logistics about the logistics of the army. and washington was corresponding with all the governors of the states simultaneously and with many other people as well. and he was leading what was the first american national institution after the

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