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Apr 18, 2015
04/15
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[laughter] edward ayers: and they have been a but of jokes for anybody around the table. [laughter] >> thank you for exposing the shallowness. [laughter] [applause] co-chair varon: we talked a little bit about this team of punishment and the lincoln conspirators. one of the questions has asked i think this is properly for elizabeth, what trout does henry worth occupy? and why is this man singled out in the way he is? what is he symbolic of? >> henry for joseph holt, who prosecuted the conspirators -- well, i should back up and say at that conspiracy trial henry was very present in the testimony and in the government's case against the conspirators because the government was trying to prove not just the local conspiracy against lincoln, but this much larger conspiracy and time to get assassination to all kinds of heinous acts on the part of the confederacy. andersonville and henry were part of that habit. so i think for hold, he did certainly stumble in his efforts to hand the tail on jefferson davis. but henry was another target for him. and, in some earth, kind of the la
[laughter] edward ayers: and they have been a but of jokes for anybody around the table. [laughter] >> thank you for exposing the shallowness. [laughter] [applause] co-chair varon: we talked a little bit about this team of punishment and the lincoln conspirators. one of the questions has asked i think this is properly for elizabeth, what trout does henry worth occupy? and why is this man singled out in the way he is? what is he symbolic of? >> henry for joseph holt, who prosecuted...
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Apr 19, 2015
04/15
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[laughter] edward ayers: and they have been a but of jokes for anybody around the table. [laughter] >> thank you for exposing the shallowness. [laughter] [applause] co-chair varon: we talked a little bit about this team of punishment and the lincoln conspirators. one of the questions has asked i think this is properly for elizabeth, what trout does henry worth occupy? and why is this man singled out in the way he is? what is he symbolic of? >> henry for joseph holt, who prosecuted the conspirators -- well, i should back up and say at that conspiracy trial henry was very present in the testimony and in the government's case against the conspirators because the government was trying to prove not just the local conspiracy against lincoln, but this much larger conspiracy and time to get assassination to all kinds of heinous acts on the part of the confederacy. andersonville and henry were part of that habit. so i think for hold, he did certainly stumble in his efforts to hand the tail on jefferson davis. but henry was another target for him. and, in some earth, kind of the la
[laughter] edward ayers: and they have been a but of jokes for anybody around the table. [laughter] >> thank you for exposing the shallowness. [laughter] [applause] co-chair varon: we talked a little bit about this team of punishment and the lincoln conspirators. one of the questions has asked i think this is properly for elizabeth, what trout does henry worth occupy? and why is this man singled out in the way he is? what is he symbolic of? >> henry for joseph holt, who prosecuted...
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Apr 19, 2015
04/15
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edward ayers: that still means that reconstruction was radical. dr. caroline janney: absolutely. edward ayers: i heard a story and ask what time a question that the panel before us was asked, what if lincoln had not been assassinated? and he said he thinks it would've slowed the civil rights movement because they wouldn't have been a 14th and 15th amendment because it wouldn't have had the resistance that the white north was willing to overcome that fatigue to make it radical. an interesting thought that if -- if you don't have a 14th amendment, you don't have a foundation for this overwrites movement that follows. i think she made a right point that it is not such a retreat as they are driven from the field in some ways. the white south actually wins reconstruction through military force. through the ku klux klan and riots and those kind of things i think it is -- it is -- >> and andrew johnson gave them a little notch. if they left it up to andrew johnson, there would be no -- >> it would have taken a real military operation to force reconstruction, and there would have been no
edward ayers: that still means that reconstruction was radical. dr. caroline janney: absolutely. edward ayers: i heard a story and ask what time a question that the panel before us was asked, what if lincoln had not been assassinated? and he said he thinks it would've slowed the civil rights movement because they wouldn't have been a 14th and 15th amendment because it wouldn't have had the resistance that the white north was willing to overcome that fatigue to make it radical. an interesting...
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Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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edward ayers. some of you have met him before, if you are in a sultry heat at manassas, he gave the keynote address at manassas on that date. it seems a very, very, very long time ago. he was more recently a driving force behind the outstanding events in richmond last weekend commemorating the fall of richmond. dr. edward ayers is one of america's preeminent civil war historians and i do not say that lightly. he is one notch is of impeccable scholarship, but reaching people beyond academia. he roots out untold stories amplifies voices unheard, and he constantly challenges us to see events in new ways, always with a sense of historical justice for those who were there. perhaps more than any historian working in the field, he helped us assign meaning to events that were almost always far more complex and far-reaching than we imagined them to be. he is retiring from the university of richmond this summer. while it is a great loss to the university, the prospect of dr. ayers devoting his energies to hi
edward ayers. some of you have met him before, if you are in a sultry heat at manassas, he gave the keynote address at manassas on that date. it seems a very, very, very long time ago. he was more recently a driving force behind the outstanding events in richmond last weekend commemorating the fall of richmond. dr. edward ayers is one of america's preeminent civil war historians and i do not say that lightly. he is one notch is of impeccable scholarship, but reaching people beyond academia. he...
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Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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edward ayers. [applause] edward l. ayers: thank you. there are indeed very many of you. convenient that all of you come labeled. i can see where everybody is from the baseball cap, so i see everything from boston to mississippi. it seems very fitting. i'm going to take a few moments to think about what it has meant for this country to have a national park service step up throughout the sesquicentennial for a year after year, day after day, to make the sites available to us, comprehensible to us, welcoming to us. it is true, i was at manassas. it was approximately 800 degrees. i also had the good fortune of being at fort sumter the evening before the firing. i happened to be at gettysburg, where it was also hot. as john mentioned, we had thousands of people in richmond to commemorate what it was like when the confederates fled that city, and united states colored troops and abraham lincoln came into it. it is one of the more powerful moments of my life. does the americans come together and remember our history. it has been a long war. i think maybe just people -- i'm goin
edward ayers. [applause] edward l. ayers: thank you. there are indeed very many of you. convenient that all of you come labeled. i can see where everybody is from the baseball cap, so i see everything from boston to mississippi. it seems very fitting. i'm going to take a few moments to think about what it has meant for this country to have a national park service step up throughout the sesquicentennial for a year after year, day after day, to make the sites available to us, comprehensible to...
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Apr 16, 2015
04/15
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edward rodrÍguez. eduardo: el dÍa ha estado despejado. 3 grados mÁs de lo que tuvimos ayer con brisas del sur. nieve, 28 pulgadas de nieve. que todo lo que recibieron durante el invierno. a nosotros lo que nos va a llegar... lo vemos un poco mÁs de cerca, estamos hablando de la medianoche pudieran haber algunos sectores al oeste que ya tenga lloviznas o chubascos pero me parece que lo principal estÁ en la madrugada. el mal tiempo continÚa moviÉndose sobre nuestra Área, 52 carÁtula mÍnima esta noche al amanecer... allentown con 52. este ese pronÓstico en horarios de la tarde. 73 filadelfia la posibilidad de lluvia no es constante. pero en diferentes horarios del dÍa vamos a tener nublados, lloviznas, chubascos podrÍan estar. al amanecer este preparado cuando vaya a llevar al niÑo a la escuela, eso es una posibilidad... este es el pronÓstico de los prÓximos dÍas. mejora el sÁbado, algo nublado, algo de niebla al amanecer la lluvia pudiera regresar con fuerza el lunes. ilia: hoy stephanie habla con una reconocida banda esto es lo que le contaron de sus Éxitos. stephanie: nos encontramos con una d
edward rodrÍguez. eduardo: el dÍa ha estado despejado. 3 grados mÁs de lo que tuvimos ayer con brisas del sur. nieve, 28 pulgadas de nieve. que todo lo que recibieron durante el invierno. a nosotros lo que nos va a llegar... lo vemos un poco mÁs de cerca, estamos hablando de la medianoche pudieran haber algunos sectores al oeste que ya tenga lloviznas o chubascos pero me parece que lo principal estÁ en la madrugada. el mal tiempo continÚa moviÉndose sobre nuestra Área, 52 carÁtula...