Podcasts about 1877

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Best podcasts about 1877

Latest podcast episodes about 1877

Millennials Are Killing Capitalism
“There Has to Be Some Consequences for These Horrors” - Tariq Khan on Settler Colonial Violence and Antileft Repression

Millennials Are Killing Capitalism

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2025 98:09


This is the conclusion of our two part conversation with Tariq Khan on his book The Republic Shall Be Kept Clean: How Settler Colonial Violence Shaped Antileft Repression. In part one of the conversation we laid out many of the general dynamics between anti-indigenous settler colonial violence in the 19th Century and the development of the earliest iterations of anticommunism in the so-called United States, long before McCarthyism or even what's recognized by historians as the first Red Scare. In this conversation we talk about some of the legal precedents that the Trump administration has dusted off for some of his attempts to remove or exclude people for political views.  Because we recorded this conversation in December before Trump took office for his second term, we did not directly address several of his actions that draw from this history. The renaming of Denali as Mt. McKinley, drawing directly on laws used to deport anarchists to go after immigrants for their political views, and continuing the genocidal legacy of this settler colonial empire in fueling the genocide in Gaza. In addition to McKinley who was assassinated by an anarchist motivated in part by the US's war in the Philippines, we talk about contrasting figures like Teddy Roosevelt, John Hay, and Albert and Lucy Parsons and the influence that the later half of the 19th century, and 1877 in particular, had on their political trajectories. In addition we talk about the history of lynching and sexual violence and the relationship this practice had to disciplining anarchists alongside its roles for white society and as a repression mechanism against solidarity across racial lines.  Dr. Tariq Khan is a historian with an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the intertwined forces underlying and shaping our social, political, economic, and cultural institutions. He has wide-ranging research, writing, and teaching experience in the fields of global capitalism, transnational studies, U.S. history, psychology, sociology, ethnicity & race studies, gender studies, colonialism & postcolonialism, labor & working-class history, radical social movements, history “from below,” public history, and community-based research and teaching. A few things to shout-out. Recently I had the pleasure of joining the good people of Tankie Group Therapy on the East is a Podcast. I also recently joined Nick Estes from the Red Nation Podcast for a discussion of J. Sakai's book Settlers and went on Saturdays with Renee with Renee Johnston and Jared Ball. Recent episodes on our YouTube channel include Freedom Archives, Abdaljawad Omar, Momodou Taal, Steven Salaita, and a couple of discussions on Pakistan, India, and Kashmir. Make sure you're subscribed to our YouTube channel so you can catch all of that work as well. If you like the work that we do, please support our show via patreon you can do so for as little as $1 a month and now you can also make a one-time contribution through BuyMeACoffee. Your support is what makes this show possible.     

The American Soul
Faith, Love, and Action: Exploring America's Religious Roots and Their Lasting Impact

The American Soul

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 31:10 Transcription Available


How do we truly prioritize faith, love, and action in our everyday lives? Join me, Jesse Cope, on a reflective journey as we unravel the profound connection between these elements and explore how they shape our existence. We begin our heartfelt session with a prayer of gratitude, seeking divine guidance not only for ourselves but for our nation as well. Through this episode of the American Soul Podcast, I invite you to reassess where God and love stand on your priority list, delving into the necessity of effort and sacrifice that genuine love often demands. By cultivating positive habits, we transform burdens into blessings, while scripture guides us to redefine richness beyond material wealth.Travel back in time as we explore the Massachusetts Constitution from 1780 to 1862, shedding light on how the founding fathers interwove governance with religious freedom. Discover the era's Protestant influences and consider their lasting impact on American liberty. With a focus on unity and global support, I offer blessings and heartfelt prayers for you and your families. Let us foster a sense of community and shared faith as we strive for wisdom and righteousness together. Tune in for a blend of history, faith, and encouragement that seeks to inspire a life of purpose and devotion.Support the showThe American Soul Podcasthttps://www.buzzsprout.com/1791934/subscribe

The American Soul
Historical Tales of Courage and Faithful Living

The American Soul

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025 26:50 Transcription Available


Can prioritizing your faith and marriage actually transform your daily life? In this episode, I, Jesse Cope, challenge the common belief that daily tasks and even children should come before nurturing spiritual commitments and the marital bond. We explore the idea that loving your spouse as your nearest neighbor not only strengthens personal faith but also sets a valuable precedent for your children. You'll discover the profound impact of dedicating time to God and your spouse, enriched by insights from resources like America's God and Country Encyclopedia of Quotes, which beautifully intertwine faith with patriotism.Journey with us into the past as we recount the inspiring story of John Philpott, a Protestant martyr whose unwavering faith during the reign of Mary I exemplifies the strength of belief that transcends denominational boundaries. We also salute the bravery of Corporal Abner Peller Allen, a Medal of Honor recipient from the Civil War, highlighting the significant role of color bearers. By sharing these historical narratives, including more from Fox's Book of Martyrs, we aim to inspire you with tales of faith, courage, and perseverance that resonate through time.Support the showThe American Soul Podcasthttps://www.buzzsprout.com/1791934/subscribe

Church News
Historian Matthew C. Godfrey on the ongoing legacy of the St. George Utah Temple

Church News

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2023 32:49


The historic St. George Utah Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the Church's longest-operating house of the Lord. Originally dedicated on April 6, 1877, and rededicated on Nov. 11, 1975, the temple is set to be rededicated again after extensive renovations. President Jeffrey R. Holland, Acting President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, will rededicate the edifice on Dec. 10. President Holland is a native of southern Utah who was married in the St. George Utah Temple. This episode of the Church News podcast features Matthew C. Godfrey, senior managing historian for outreach and engagement in the Church History Department, discussing how the temple in St. George has changed the lives of generations of Latter-day Saints and how the most recent maintenance of the temple will continue to point its patrons toward Jesus Christ.  The Church News Podcast is a weekly podcast that invites listeners to make a journey of connection with members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints across the globe. Host Sarah Jane Weaver, reporter and editor for The Church News for a quarter-century, shares a unique view of the stories, events, and most important people who form this international faith. With each episode, listeners are asked to embark on a journey to learn from one another and ponder, “What do I know now?” because of the experience. Produced by KellieAnn Halvorsen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

TechStuff
How Two Major Fires Changed US Patent Law

TechStuff

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 33:08


A fire in 1836 wiped out nearly every patent on file in the United States. How did the patent office rebuild, and how did a second fire in 1877 change things even more?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

This Day in History Class
Thomas Edison suggests using the word "hello" as a telephone greeting - August 15th, 1877

This Day in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2023 8:01 Transcription Available


On this day in 1877, Thomas Edison proposed saying “hello” when greeting someone on the telephone.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

This Day in History Class
A catcher's mask is used in a baseball game for the first time - April 12th, 1877

This Day in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2023 8:08


On this day in 1877, Harvard student James Tyng became the first-known baseball player to wear a catcher's mask.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

This Is What We Found
Ep 36 Alright...Lets Get Weird, Thomas Patterson Lego & Margaret Stevens

This Is What We Found

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2022 63:45


Some darkness unfolds this week with Thomas Patterson Lego, a 2nd Great Grandfather on our paternal side. Having participated in the railroad strike of 1877 did this contribute to what seemed like a very chaotic life? He certaintly was mentioned in newspapers from Harrisburg, PA to Philadelphia on the regular. Just where was margaret born?

Musicopolis
Camille Saint-Saëns à Paris en 1877 (3/5) : La Danse Macabre

Musicopolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2022 25:09


durée : 00:25:09 - Camille Saint-Saëns à Paris en 1877 (3/5) - par : Anne-Charlotte Rémond - En 1874, Saint-Saëns créé La Danse macabre. Ce poème symphonique est un tel succès que des arrangeurs l'adaptent pour toutes les occasions. Liszt en crée une version pour piano seul. - réalisé par : Béatrice Trichet

Musicopolis
Camille Saint-Saëns à Paris en 1877 (2/5) : “Le Timbre d'argent”

Musicopolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2022 25:09


durée : 00:25:09 - Camille Saint-Saëns à Paris en 1877 (2/5) - par : Anne-Charlotte Rémond - Le 23 février 1877, Camille Saint-Saëns crée son premier opéra "Le Timbre d'argent", douze ans après son écriture, au Théâtre Lyrique, à Paris. Exigences de directeurs capricieux, guerre de 1870, cette oeuvre a failli ne jamais voir le jour. - réalisé par : Béatrice Trichet

Musicopolis
Camille Saint-Saëns à Paris en 1877 (1/5) : la Société nationale de musique

Musicopolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2022 25:09


durée : 00:25:09 - Camille Saint-Saëns à Paris en 1877 (1/5) - par : Anne-Charlotte Rémond - Camille Saint-Saëns fonde en 1871 la Société Nationale de Musique. Son but : défendre les créations des compositeurs français et les jouer en public. Ainsi en 1877, Gabriel Fauré, élève de Saint-Saëns, présente sa première sonate pour piano et violon. - réalisé par : Béatrice Trichet

Ich sehe was, was du nicht siehst
„Irgendwie musste ich an den Wendler und seine Laura denken“

Ich sehe was, was du nicht siehst

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2020 27:36


Wenn zwei so unterschiedliche Menschen wie Lars Haider, Chefredakteur des Hamburger Abendblatts, und Alexander Klar, Direktor der Hamburger Kunsthalle, miteinander „Ich sehe was, was du nicht siehst“ spielen, kann es schnell zu Missverständnissen kommen. Während Haider das Bild, um das es in dieser Episode geht, „angenehm harmlos“ fand, war es für Klar „sehr anrüchig“: Es geht um Manets „Nana“, und am Ende um die Frage, was das mit dem Wendler und Laura Müller zu tun haben könnte – zwei Personen der aktuellen Zeitgeschichte, mit denen der Herr Kunsthallendirektor übrigens nichts anfangen konnte. Das Bild zum Mit-Anschauen gibt es hier: www.hamburger-kunsthalle.de/sammlung-online/edouard-manet/nana

Musicopolis
Moscou 1877 : Le Lac des Cygnes de Piotr Ilyitch Tchaikovski

Musicopolis

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2020 25:10


durée : 00:25:10 - Tchaikovsky, "le Lac des cygnes" - par : Anne-Charlotte Rémond - Le 20 février 1877, la création à Moscou d'un ballet écrit spécialement pour le Bolchoï, fait figure d'événement. En effet, la ville ne monte en général que des ouvrages créés à Saint-Petersbourg, la capitale. L'oeuvre est signée Tchaikovski. Il a 36 ans et Le Lac des Cygnes est son premier ballet. - réalisé par : Philippe Petit

Stjärnbaneret - Historiepodden om USA:s historia
61 Översikt del 33: Rekonstruktionens KKK, reträtt och kompromissen 1877

Stjärnbaneret - Historiepodden om USA:s historia

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2019 52:14


Översiktsserien fortsätter, rekonstruktionen avslutas. Det kommer att handla om rösträtt för afroamerikaner, Ulysses Grant som president, Ku Klux Klans skapande, Carpetbaggers och Scalawags, första afroamerikanska senatorerna, den solida södern, kaotiskt presidentval och kompromissen 1877. Glöm inte att prenumerera på podcasten! Ge den gärna betyg på iTunes! Följ podden på Facebook (facebook.com/stjarnbaneret), twitter (@stjarnbaneret) eller Instagram (@stjarnbaneret) Kontakta oss på: stjarnbaneret@gmail.com

Musicopolis
1877, Louise Héritte-Viardot compose son ''Quatuor en ré mineur''

Musicopolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2019 24:59


durée : 00:24:59 - Louise Héritte-Viardot, Quatuor - par : Anne-Charlotte Rémond - A la rencontre de la compositrice Louise Héritte-Viardot, fille de la célèbre cantatrice et compositrice Pauline Viardot. Dans Musicopolis, Anne-Charlotte Rémond dresse le portrait de la musicienne et vous invite à découvrir son ''Quatuor en ré mineur'' créé à Paris en mai 1877. - réalisé par : Claire Lagarde

Fragile Freedom
March 2nd. 1877

Fragile Freedom

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2017 10:20


The Inauguration of the 19th President was but three days away. The problem was that though the election had been held four month prior, there was little telling who that would have been. New York Governor Samuel Tilden had won the popular vote by over 280,000, he had a clear majority of 50.9% to Ohio Governor Rutherford B. Hayes 47.9%. What’s more is he had to believe that he had edged out his Republican opponent in the Electoral College. He had taken 184 seats, one shy of the majority he needed to be sworn in, compared to Haye’s 165. With 19 out of the 20 electors in question being from the South, Tilden had to believe that he could manage to pick up 1 state before his opponent in that bitterly fought race would take all 20. After all, even if Hayes did take those three states, which seemed unlikely, Oregon Governor LaFayette Grover had given him the vote he needed when he replaced a Republican Elector John Watts with Democrat C.A. Cronin. The truth was that the Democrats had every right to believe that they would win the election. Having had been in political exile since earliest of days of the Civil War, the Panic of 1873 had given them their opening. The next year they would make significant gains in the Senate, but more importantly, for the first time since 1860 they would take the House. By 1876 corruption, scandal and a lagging economy so plagued the Republican Party that many in the party feared that President Ulysses S. Grant would run for a third term, and there was nothing they could do about it. Though the legendary General, having seen his once golden reputation now tarnished by the political arena, would step down, the emergence of the virtually unknown Rutherford B. Hayes as the conventions dark horse, had all but handed the election to Tilden. Had not the charismatic Senator James G. Blaine of Maine not been embroiled in scandal they might have stood a chance. Instead they were straddled with a compromise on the 7th ballot as the Governor who placed 5th on the first two ballots became their candidate. Even as the election turned dirty, even as his opponents tried to tar him as briber, thief and drunken syphilitic Tilden was the man who had gone against the political machine. He was the great reformer who had sent Boss Bill Tweed to prison. No amount of “Waving the Bloody Shirt” was going to distract from the fact that Tilden was the only man to clean up the mess of the previous Republican Administration. Though there was allegations of fraud and intimidation, with South Carolina, for example, reporting 101% voter turnout of all eligible voters while African-American votes more likely to be Republican than Democrat were suppressed, it was a bump in the road. He had little doubt that the newly appointed 15 Member Election Commission, selected by Congress to resolve the issue when the College could not name a clear winner, would undoubtedly give him the final legitimacy he needed. It would take until March 2nd, 1877 but finally it had been decided by the 8 Republicans and 7 Democrats who comprised the Commission. Though Associate Justice Joseph P. Bradley, a Republican, had indicated that he would vote to award Florida to Tilden the night before, the end vote would be right along party lines, and, without a majority of both the House and Senate, it was finalized. As he travelled to Washington by train, Rutherford B. Hayes was informed that he had secured the 20 electoral seats necessary to defeat Governor Tilden by a single vote in the College. By the narrowest of majorities, the election had been decided with Louisiana, South Carolina, Florida, and that third vote from Oregon going to Hayes to give him a single seat edge over the more popular Tilden. For the first time in history the nation would have a President who lost the popular vote but won the Electoral College. The Democrat controlled House would filibuster to prevent the results from becoming official, knowing that it needed to be finalized by the 4th or interregnum would occur as the normal functions of government would be suspended. It would take the compromise of 1877 to eventually resolve the issue, with Hayes agreeing to appoint a Democrat as the Post-Master General, and to remove all Federal Troops from Government Buildings in Louisiana, Florida and South Carolina, ending Reconstruction. Though Republicans would celebrate, with papers like the New York Times declaring, “Indeed, some of them go so far as to say that no matter what may come, the country is well rid of the pretender Tilden. For that person no one has a good word.” many Democrats would not, dubbing Hayes as “His Fraudulency” and “The Usurper”. In many senses he would never be their President. Four years later he would not subject himself to another election, reaffirming his commitment to a single term as he stepped aside for James Garfield. Tilden would go to the grave in 1886 believing he had been robbed what was rightfully his by the “Boss Thief”, declaring, “ I can retire to public life with the consciousness that I shall receive from posterity the credit of having been elected to the highest position in the gift of the people without any of the cares and responsibilities of the office.”