It’s one of the most recognized sites within Colonial Williamsburg’s Historic Area, and figures prominently in a major turning point in our history. The Magazine has a unique structure and history, and is currently undergoing (another) restoration. Cardinal 250 host Dutchie Jessee talks with Matthew Webster of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation about the Magazine, its history and its future, in the latest edition of the Cardinal 250 podcast.
You can listen here.
You can read more about the restoration of the Magazine in this story.
Check out our other Cardinal 250 podcasts:
- Michael Hudson of Historic Smithfield in Blacksburg talks about Botetourt County spy John Wyatt
- Stephen Wilson of the St. John’s Church Foundation, about Patrick Henry’s famous “give me liberty or give me death” speech.
- Harvey Bakari, Black history curator at the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation on Billy Flora, a free Black man who was a hero of the Battle of Great Bridge.
- The age of the Founding Fathers (which was younger than you might think).
- The music of the Revolution.
- The legend of Susanna Bolling, a 16-year-old from modern-day Hopewell who supposedly rode overnight to save Lafayette from being captured
- Historian Garrett Channell on “forgotten founder” Andrew Lewis.
- Tom Vaughan of the Overmountain Men Trail Association.
- Essex County Museum Executive Director Tim Manley about his county’s re-enactment of the historic Essex Resolutions.
- Descendants of Black Virginians who moved to freedom in Nova Scotia after the war (and the Canadian museum dedicated to them).
- Award-winning historian Woody Holton about “the forgotten founders.”
- Retired Virginia Commonwealth University journalism professor Jeff South about the role of the press in Colonial Virginia.
- South also talks about Clementina Rind, the first woman to publish a newspaper in Virginia.
- Cheryl Wilson, executive director of the Virginia American Revolution 250 Commission.