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tv   American Artifacts  CSPAN  July 4, 2016 1:00pm-1:41pm EDT

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is that there was one member of the senate who endorsed his candidacy, and typically members of the house -- i mean, representative ryan was a relatively rare choice, but representatives are usually not taken. when they are taken, it tends to, with the exception of the ryan selection, it tends to indicate that the ticket is a weaker ticket and couldn't get a senator or an executive branch official or a governor. so go back to the short answer, i don't have a clue. [ laughter ] >> no more questions? >> thank you very much. [ applause ] >> thank you. >> i am a history buff. i do enjoy seeing the fabric of our country and how things, just
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how they work and how they're made. >> i love american history tv. the presidency. american artifacts, fantastic shows. >> i had no idea they did history. that's probably something i would really enjoy. >> and with american history tv, it gives you that perspective. >> i'm a c-span fan. >> nina allender was the political cartoonist for the national womens party from 1914 until 1927, contributing over 150 cartoons supporting the campaign for womens suffrage. next we visit the national monument to see her work. >> my name is jennifer krafcik and i am the deputy director at the belmont paul national monument which was formerly the belmont house and museum on capitol hill in washington, d.c. this house was the fifth and final headquarters of the
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national womens party. the national womens party was founded by a woman named alice paul in 1913, as the congressional union for womens suffrage. and the congressional union for womens suffrage became the national womens party in 1916. this group of women spent seven years actively lobbying the president and congress for a federal suffrage amendment, at which time once they received the amendment in 1920, they began -- they wrote and began lobbying for the equal rights amendment. during the period when they were lobbying for suffrage, they were working all over the country actively garnering support from western women voters. and bringing the fight directly to the president's doorstep. they had headquarters over on lafayette square where they could walk out their door and be right at the president's doorstep in a matter of minutes. and they began picketing the
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white house, one of the first groups to do so. when the united states entered world war i in 1917, at that time the pickets at the white house were quite peaceful, but they quickly turned ugly when crowds watching these women picket the white house believed their behavior to be unpatriotic. so crowds would throw things at the women. they would converge on them and tear the banners from their hands. and in june of 1917 the women began being arrested on charges of obstructing traffic. and they were taken to prison and sentenced to prison sentences anywhere from three days to six months. and they were imprisoned at the district prison here in washington, d.c. and in virginia at the workhouse. they weren't treated like political prisoners. they were treated like any other prisoners often thrown into their cells, at times their hands handcuffed above them. so these women began protesting that treatment. and they went on hunger strikes.
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and were force fed. because of their activities there was a lot of press around what was happening to them, which ended up garnering a lot of public sympathy for their cause. in 1919 thanks to not only the work of the national womens party but other suffrage organizations working for similar goals, the federal amendment was passed by both houses of congress and sent to the states for ratification. in 1920 it was ratified by all 36 states and became law. by 1921 and 1922 the national womens party believing that suffrage was only the first step in a many step process to achieve full womens equality began working on the equal rights amendment. alice paul and a woman named crystal eastman wrote the equal rights amendment and presented it to the party in 1923. from that time the nationalist party worked for legal, social and economic equality for women throughout the united states and later throughout the world.
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they worked for the equal rights amendment from this house from 1923 up until 1997 when they became a 501c3. we educate the public about this movement and the stories of this community of women who worked for total equality for women. the belmont paul house is actually named after alice paul, our original founder, and then alva belmont. belmont was the benefactor and president of the national womens party for many years. and it's because of her we have such a large collection of books, scrapbooks, artifacts and many other objects that allow us to tell this story. now we're upstairs. and we're going to talk a little bit about our collection of political cartoons by the national womens party's official cartoonist nina allender. the national womens party was the only party to boast an
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official cartoonist. and allender's work appeared on the covers of their publication, the suffragist and its later title, equal rights, for more than ten years. allender grew up in auburn, kansas. she was born in 1872. and her family actually moved to washington, d.c. around 1900. her mother was one of the first women employees at the department of the interior. and allender studied painting at the school of art here in d.c. with the intention of becoming an art teacher. she was a painter, she loved to paint and that was a big part of her identity. but she also worked for the government land office. so she recognized that painting wouldn't pay the bills. she was president of the d.c. branch of the national american womens suffrage association for many years. and when alice paul came to d.c. in 1912 with the intention of lobbying for the federal
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amendment, allender watched first with interest in this new woman. there's a great story in one of the early biographies of the national woman's party where allender and her mother receive alice paul at their house. and both of them of course were very interested in the suffrage movement. and they were eager to hear from this woman who they claimed was about as big as their finger, walking into their house. and the story goes that by the time alice paul left they had committed both time and money to the suffrage movement and to the congressional union without realizing what they had actually committed to or how this little woman had managed to convince them to begin lobbying for the federal amendment. and allender all of a sudden was an active member of this party working for the federal suffrage amendment. so i think she always sort of looked around in amazement at alice paul's negotiating and
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strategic way of convincing people to not only work for the movement but also to give money. so allender began her career as an official cartoon -- or as the cartoonist of the national women's party. her first work appeared in 1914. one of the interesting things about her early work is that a lot of it focused on poverty, child labor, the exploitation of women and labor legislation. and so her first work appeared in -- on the cover of the suffragist in june of 1914. and from then on there was no looking back. she did more than 150 cartoons for the pages of the suffragist over a period of seven years. they appeared almost weekly. and like most political cartoons today they were commentary on ongoing political issues. they were sort of the news of the week with great attention to
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how that news impacted or was influenced by what was happening in the suffrage movement. so here is one of her early works. this is one of my favorite pieces actually in the museum. this is called the inspiration of the suffrage workers. and you can see how she's commenting on a lot of different ideas in this piece. she's talking about the importance of the vote as a way of changing the condition of women. you see the woman holding her child and the other little girl is sitting in the street playing with a cat. and there's trash surrounding her. and this is obviously in an impoverished area. so allender often, especially in these early pieces, was commenting on how the vote would change the ability for women to earn their own wages, protect their children and move up in society in a way that not having the right to vote or any voice
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in the laws that were being made would allow them to do. so now we're actually going to make our way into the gallery. in our collection today we have about 170 of allender's original works. one of the only known collections of her works in the country. and as far as i know no other museum has any of her paintings or any of her other works either. so beginning in 1914, as i said, she was doing a lot of work on the condition of women. but as the suffrage movement progressed and as the national womens party's activism increased, they began a strategy that they called holding the party in power responsible. and at that time that was the democratic party led by president woodrow wilson. so allender's work often pinpointed symbols of the democratic party, and more importantly the main symbol of
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the democratic party which was the president. in this piece here allender -- this is called fairy godmother wilson. and it was published on the coverage of the suffragist december 4, 1915. and you can obviously see that allender is utilizing the fairytale "cinderella" to make commentary about the power wilson wielded over the improvement and condition of women and over the laws of the country as well. so president wilson is playing fairy godmother. this woman is cinderella. and in between you see the pumpkin as the constitutional amendment and the mice as the senate and the house. and president wilson is casting a spell to make it possible for her to use the amendment to use her constitutional amendment to vote for the people who represent her. so a lot of commentary about president wilson's power. and just as an aside here in the background and in the mirror you
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see the proud voting sisters. and this was indicating the fact that women in western states actually many western states at that point had the right to vote at that time. so the national women's party would ultimately start pinpointing those women to help vote as a block and vote the democratic party out of office. the title of this cartoon is lest we forget. and one of the things that is important to note about the national women's party in general and then certainly the way in which allender's work reflected this idea is that the national women's party always paid tribute to the women who were considered mothers of the suffrage movement. and that included in particular susan b. anthony. this cartoon is featuring a line of women paying tribute to susan b. anthony who died before the federal suffrage amendment was passed but who actually introduced the original suffrage
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amendment in 1875. so you see women and children. you can see women who were college graduates in here. you see this little tag here. it says voter. and that's indicating western women voters who had the right to vote. and then up here you see a lone woman walking up the steps of the capital, up to the capital and that date 1875 when susan b. anthony first introduced that amendment. so 1875 to 1915. and the intent of this is to demonstrate how far we've come, but how long we still have to go. and this was fairly common for the national women's party. and for allender also to pay tribute to these original suffragists. and all of the work and progress that women have made, but also reminding their members how far they still have to go. and now let's go over to this cartoon. this cartoon is called, our hat
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is in the ring. and it was drawn and published on april 8, 1916. this cartoon is particularly representative of allender's belief that women needed to be presented with authority, strength and control. she created an image called -- that she called the allender girl. and this woman was a different image a lot of people saw particularly in images of suffragists and images of women that appeared in the press at that time. oftentimes political cartoonists would mock the suffrage movement by making women look haggard or ugly or fraught in some way. and allender instead turns that on its head. and she creates a youthful, invigora invigorated, intelligent woman. in this image in particular she's very slender, her skirt is above her ankles, which was also quite different at that time. so you kind of see the changing face of fashion at that time as well. her hands are on her hips, and
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she throws her hat into the ring of politics. so here you can see her hat says the women's party. and you see sort of these comical images of a progressive, a democrat and a republican all kind of looking in wonderment at this woman who's very strongly standing there saying i'm moving in. the importance of this cartoon is also that, as i mentioned before the national women's party was originally founded as the union for women's suffrage and changed their name to the women's party in june of 1916. so this is published in april of 1916, and you can kind of see them predicting what's about to happen within their party. and so the women's party was an important name because at times the idea was grappled with going beyond lobbying for the federal amendment to actually becoming an active political player in the same vein of a democrat or
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republican. this cartoon is called changing fashions. satisfied with so little, published in march 1915. this is an opportunity for allender to comment on how they were targeting congress at this time. and showcasing -- this is actually talking about so many different things here. so not only are they targeting congress and you see the woman holding out her skirt saying national constitutional amendment. and it's this very grand ruffly skirt she's holding out. but she's also wearing a hat that shows new york, pennsylvania, new jersey and massachusetts, all states that are voting on suffrage referendums in 1915. so this is also a way of lobbying for those states to receive municipal suffrage. and then on her skirt she also has west virginia and iowa, which may have been states that were also voting at that time.
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but she's holding out this skirt national constitutional amendment and the congressman is looking at her in bewilderment saying she used to be satisfied with so little. so at this time you see allender focusing her attention on that federal amendment, but also talking about how this continued to be state by state by state. and her work reflects that in other ways too. as they approach a ratification of the amendment in 1920, allender's work began to increasingly reflect the idea we're still having to ratify this amendment and that that could also be a process that could hold them up. in 1919 the national women's party created a banner in which they started selling stars. so for every state that ratified the amendment, they would sew a star on the banner. and by 1920 they had 36 states on this banner.
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and the day that suffrage was passed, there's this iconic image of alice paul unfurling the banner at headquarters and showing it for all of the members. and we no longer know what happened to that banner, but we're hoping that somebody has it in their attic somewhere. but there's also a great allender cartoon that shows them also sewing those stars on the banner. work is continuing to reflect the state movements while also showing the federal movement as well. this cartoon is called american justice. and it was published on june 1, 1918. but the interesting thing about this cartoon is actually that this is another instance of allender taking the imagery of democracy and of patriotism, certainly this is obviously uncle sam standing here, and turning it on its head just a little bit. this is a very powerful image. you're seeing uncle sam standing in front of this bound, gagged,
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helpless woman. he's holding a bouquet of flowers and what he's saying is american women you are our inspiration, you give us our soldiers, you can serve our food, you work in our munition factories, you serve our sick and wounded, accept this bouquet. so he's sort of trying to force this on this woman. so you see her bound with political rights, equal work, unequal wages and this kindly omit flowers rope. so these are obviously issues that women still continue to grapple with today. and this image is one of many that allender used where she features uncle sam, the democratic donkey, the republican elephant and other typical images of democracy to showcase how contradictory our country was toward women, particularly during world war i.
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these women really focused on the fact president wilson was lobbying for democracy abroad while not doing so here in the united states. and we're going to look at another cartoon that really shows that issue. we're going to move over here. this cartoon is called insulting the president. and it was published on june 2, 1917. in january of 1917, the national women's party began picketing the white house through a sustained act of nonviolent protest. and they were among the first group ever to do this. every day these women would stand in front of the white house holding their banners that would basically speak for them saying, mr. president, how long must women wait for liberty. and talking about democracy in this country. and using president wilson's speeches and his words to show, again, the contradictory nature
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of the direction of the united states. in april of 1917 we entered world war i. and then their banners became a little bit more problematic. they were seen as unpatriotic. and this particular cartoon, like i said, was published in june of 1917, which is just before women started to be arrested. this particular cartoon shows our allender girl, again. again, kind of the skirt above the ankle. this was how women dressed when they were standing at the white house. so her work also reflects the reality of how they were on a daily basis. and then you see the banner that she's holding is a quote from a speech written by wilson saying, we shall fight for the things we have always carried nearest our hearts for democracy, for the right of those who submit to authority to have a voice in their own governments. and then it says ww down here at the bottom. and this was fairly typical. so this is just before their
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being arrested. and allender's work continues to reflect that a lot over the next in particular the next several months where the arrests became particularly violent. and so you start to see her work show women in prison skprks you see other instances, again, of the donkey and the elephant being used to persecute women. so they're kind of keeping up that targeting congress and targeting the party in power by using these banners to their advantage. and they picketed the white house. they also picketed congress at times. and they took their banners across the country too. so they were really lobbying against congress in a very national way. so we're going to move across to the -- this cartoon. which was published in february 1, 1920. so we're almost to the finish line. this one's called training the
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animals. at this point, the amendment had been sent to the states for ratification. and so passage was all but -- or the hope was that passage was all but achieved. and so you see the democratic donkey and the republican elephant standing there as the woman is holding a treat that says, vote, on it sochlt she is literally training these animals to get used to the idea that women are now entering the political arena. and will exercise their right to vote. and so her 1920 cartoons in particular sort of re-emphasizing this over and over again. and i believe this is one of the final times that she actually employed the donkey and the elephant. so this cartoon is called, call to the women voters, standby your disfranchised sisters. and this is obviously we can see
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an unfinished cartoon. so it has the masked head started up here of suffragist, which would have been the head of their publication. this is another instance of allender using imagery to make an impact. they oftentimes showed women in this sort of in this way, this particular woman is wearing the flowing robes and blowing a horn. and the intent of this piece is actually to garner support from western women voters, to bring them together to vote as a block against the democratic party. and this is another instance. the finished product actually looked very different once it was published in the suffragist. so you'll see that they added some slogans and pieces to the original drawing. so allender did the bones and then the editors of the suffragist added additional context to it. and this is a great instance of showcasing the editing of
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allender's works. the editors would also feed her information about the articles that would appear in the suffragist so they would tie together nicely. and in this case there's a great quote within the suffragist in this particular issue that talks about the need for western women to stand up for the disenfranchised women across the united states. we are now in the florence bayard library at the belmont house the first established by the national women's party in 1941. this is the primary place where we house our collection. and even more importantly we house all of our nina allender cartoons and all of our political cartoons in this space. so i've pulled out a few cartoons to show some additional facets of allender's work.
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this particular piece is fantastic. it's one of her earlier pieces. you can see it's quite large. it is a more of a poster than any of her other work. and you can really see the detail that she put into this. this is another one of those early pieces where she's talking about women workers, child labor, exploitation, the title of this work is child saving is womans work, votes for women. and it appeared, i believe, in a june issue, june of 1914 issue of the suffragist. but you can really see the factories here in the background and then the crowds, the line of women and children that are wrapped around. but this is also a great opportunity for us to talk a little bit about the materials that allender used to create these works. she often used graphite or charcoal to draw them. there are very few instances where allender uses color in any
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of her work. and i will show you in just a moment a piece where she uses color, but sometimes she would use watercolor paint. but interestingly with these pieces she was never picky about the type of paper she used. it was obviously that allender would use whatever she had in her studio at the time. so it could be anything from artist's paper or poster to something thicker like a poster board, cardboard, sometimes you see that she's started a work and then didn't like it so she'd scratch it out and turn it over and use the same material to start a new piece. so it really varied the type of materials she would use to draw on. what they would do with these is once allender drew them, and she would either draw them in her own studio at home where there are womens of her at national
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women's party headquarters drawing them there. what she would do with these pieces is she would give them to the editors of the suffragist, they would go through an editing process, allender would make recommendations on captions, sometimes those captions would be changed. went back and forth on that. they'd make markings on the backs. and then these items would be put onto metal print blocks that were then used to print the newspaper. and it didn't matter how large or how small the items were, they always appeared to be about the same size once they were on the coverage of the suffragist. so i'm going to close this piece and i'm actually going to show a few pieces that demonstrate the editing process. i also want to draw your attention to because of the many different materials that she used, you can see that this piece has split in two over time. so it also gives us a chance to talk about how fragile these materials are. preservation of these items is
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very difficult. they have sustained water damage, flaking. every time you handle one of these pieces something will flake off. there are holes in them. the national women's party didn't necessarily mean for these pieces to survive as long as they have. they were work product. and that's how they were treated. so close this. so we have a few additional works that show the editing process. so i'm going to kind of show this piece here. and this is quite a power fful drawing. you can see the woman is held by a noose. so the senate has her in a noose hanging by a tree and she's representing the suffrage movement here. and then there's this person
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riding in to save democracy. and i believe this is woodrow wilson here. and in the caption that allender chose for this piece is, his last chance. so i think in this case she's talking about this is wilson's last chance to preserve democracy by saving this woman. but if you flip it over, a lot of these have allender's original notes. and in this case she's addressing this to the editor and saying, i am sure you can come up with a better caption than i have. so she's suggesting they need to think about the caption they want to use for this. and rethink what her recommendation is. this is one of the pieces that i mentioned where she uses color. so this is watercolor that she uses on here. and this is a fairly simple cartoon. it was published in 1919. the caption that she wrote is 31 more days, so they're showing the date and this would have been right around the time it
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would be published and she's demonstrating they only have 31 more days for a particular deadline to achieve their -- to perhaps get suffrage passed or get arguments held in congress or something along those lines. and then you flip it over and there's a pretty lengthy note from nina allender, and i'll sort of paraphrase it. but she basically says, there's a lot behind this date, and our members won't necessarily know what 31 more days means. so we need to find a way to caption it or put more information in the suffragist about what this deadline actually means so our members will understand. so this is allender's way of saying this is not so simple. i think people are going to need a little help with this one. this is actually another great instance of where you can see the pinholes in it.
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there are little pin marks where they would just put these up on the walls. and there's a great image of nina allender surrounded by her work in her office where it's just hung all over the walls surrounding her. it must be at least 25 or 30 pieces that they just tacked up there. but, again, they didn't really see these as long lasting preserved pieces. but this was work product. this was something they had to do every week to get their issue of the suffragist out. this was her job. and so she worked very hard to make it happen quickly, efficiently and get it to the editors so that they could add it to the issue. i'm going to talk a little bit about their -- the cartoons she did once they won the right to vote. and started working toward the equal rights amendment. so this particular piece is called protection.
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and one of the early issues that the national women's party was working for and really publicizing a lot is protection of women. so how the equal rights amendment would lend itself to increased protection of women who were trying to raise their children. independence for mothers who weren't necessarily married or widowed mothers, equal pay. and so this is one of those pieces that is demonstrating how the equal rights amendment will lend itself to increased protection for women. because one of the big opposing arguments against the equal rights amendment was that protective labor legislation would be negatively impacted if the e.r.a. were to be passed. so this one would have also been published around 1923 or 1914. these women now have the right to vote, and they're presenting to susan b. anthony the bill of rights. and she is -- this image is not
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captioned here, but it would have been in the equal rights magazine and susan b. anthony's going down the list of rights that women still do not have. and saying you all still have a lot of work to do. and the national women's party firmly believed that. nina allender once said that political cartooning gave her a sense of power that nothing else did. and i don't think she ever intended to become a political cartoonist. she was an artist. she was a painter. and she always believed that that was her path. but over the course of more than ten years she ended up drawing more than 200 cartoons for the national women's party. images that resonated with women, that created a new image for women, somebody they could look up to and relate to. and so her perspective became very important to the overall success and strategy of the national women's party. this, like so many other -- so much of the other work that they
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were doing was really dedicated to getting their message out in the press, positive or negative, no matter what. and showcasing the strategy that they were employing to bring this movement to a close. so in 1920 when women won the right to vote, it made sense that allender turned right around and continued to draw. her last work appeared in equal rights in 1927, but allender actually continued to work for the national women's party. ultimately becoming chairman of their world women's party later on. and chairman of their legal counsel. so she really delved into other areas in her later life. and she passed away in 1957 at the age of 88. so her work today continues to resonate with our visitors. and it is certainly a draw for a lot of people who come here. but oddly enough she continues
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to be not well known as we'd like. so we'd like people to come here and see her work and the work of others to experience this hall of portraits in this community of women and the stories that we're able to tell. nina allender, her work at one point was referred to like this, a woman speaking to women in the language of women about women. and that remains true today. so here in the hall of portraits we invite you to come in and experience our selfie station where you can become part of this hall and see yourself as a future leader, empower your sons and daughters to continue to fight for women's equality and be a part of women's empowerment, and activity in politics. the house is actually open thursdays, fridays and saturdays from 11:00 to 4:00. and we invite you to take a
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tour. >> you can watch this and other american artifacts programs by visiting our website at cspan.org/history. monday july 4th on american history tv, supreme court justices ruth bader ginsburg and sonja sonja so tomayor join discussions. here's a preview. >> so there's evidence that the martial court justices like to share regional food products with each other. they were very proud of the foods from their hometowns. for example, john marshal sent virginia hams up to joseph story in boston. and story reciprocated by sending down salted cod along with a recipe for how to cook salted cod, because it's not easy. you have to soak it and he
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wasn't sure that the virgin yans would know what to do with it. so my question is for both justices starting with justice ginsburg. are there modern examples of justices today on the court bringing food from their hometowns or back from their travels? >> well, there are hunting trips. we had an intrepid hunter on the court who would bring everything back from fish to fowl to bambi, to wild boor and very generous in sharing. >> justice breyer not so long ago decided he needed to introduce his grandchildren to pheasant, caught by our colleague. and presented the pheasant, cooked it and presented it at home to his grandchildren but explained they had to be careful because there might be pellets in the game. >> yum. >> and they refused to eat it.
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so he ate it alone. >> another favorite was -- it's called beef jerky. it was made by sandra day o'connor's brother on the laze di b ranc-- lazy b ranch, the f ranch, and sometimes bring a large supply of jerky and distribute it. >> did you try it? it's apparently quite spicy. >> it is very spicy. >> i would have loved it. >> and i understand that justice breyer and justice kennedy have brought wine for the court to share, is that? >> only on very special occasions. it was the traditional dinner before the state of the union
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message. and one year justice kennedy came with a couple of bottles from california. >> he's also brought duck from california. >> that was the first time i fell asleep during the state of the union. [ laughter ] >> watch the entire program on the supreme court's food traditions monday july 4th a:00t 6: 6:00:p.m. eastern here on american history's c-span tv. up next, we head to colonial williamsburg to learn about george washington's life after he retired from the presidency. author peter henriques -- to autonomous at mt. ver nonand remain active in politics. reveals that even though

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