"The Original Promise of America" - Lecture Series

"The Original Promise of America" - Lecture Series

November 21 - “ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL”

Noah Webster House - 227 South Main Street, West Hartford, CT, United States

“THE ORIGINAL PROMISE OF AMERICA”

2024 Lecture Series

July 18 ~ September 19 ~ November 21

6:30-7:30pm

OVERVIEW


This series of lectures will explore how the Revolutionary generation—Noah Webster’s generation—defined the purposes and prospects of their new nation.  Noah will make occasional appearances; he played a considerable part in creating a distinctive national culture. But the talks won’t foreground him, nor will they bask in nostalgia for a simpler, more hopeful age.  Studies of the past inevitably reflect the present; they can also illuminate paths into the future.  While focusing on Revolutionary Americans’ thinking about the promise of the United States in its childhood, we will consider as well how much of their vision has survived, how much ought to be preserved, and why. Please note: each lecture event is ticketed separately.

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THE ORIGINAL PROMISE OF AMERICA: “ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL” 

November 21, 2024


A few idealists claimed the American republic stood for the equal rights of all humankind.  So did a few Revolutionary propagandists, among them the author of the Declaration of Independence.

The truth was otherwise.  White men claimed the lion’s share of all that America offered, with little left over for the rest of humanity.

People of color fared the worst.  Native Americans received nothing but broken pledges.  The new nations promised only bondage to the vast majority of its black residents.  By the time of the Revolution, slaves made up 20% of the colonial population.   Jefferson and Washington each enslaved hundreds of Black people; even Franklin owned several servants.  Nor did any of these great men “remember the ladies” when laying the nation’s foundations, as Abigail Adams famously urged her husband John to do.

But women and Black people knew America was very young and growing fast, a country of the future.  From the beginning they claimed larger shares of American promises than their white male masters had ever dreamed of offering them.

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Noah Webster House Museum Members = $7.00 (per event)

General Admission = $12.00 (per event)

*Doors open to the presentation at 6:00pm, and seating is on a first come-first served basis.  Seating is limited to 50 guests, and tickets will be available soon.

About the Presenter: Gene Leach is a long-time resident of West Hartford and taught United States history and American Studies at Trinity College in Hartford until his retirement in 2012. Gene came to Trinity College in 1975 with degrees from Harvard, Michigan, and Yale; at various points in his long tenure, he directed the American Studies Program, chaired the History Department, and directed the graduate programs in both fields. His scholarship has centered on American social thought and this country’s working class. Leach has written, lectured, and served on governing boards for several organizations devoted to Connecticut history and culture—including the West Hartford Historical Society!

Upcoming Events (1)

Noah Webster House - 227 South Main Street, West Hartford, CT, United States