Cardinal News is nearly two years into our 250 project — the aim of which is to shine a light on lesser-known Virginians who played a part in our nation’s birth. We look back at the history we knew and what we’ve learned through the project in this episode with Cardinal 250 editor Dwayne Yancey.
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Check out our other Cardinal 250 podcasts:
- Matthew Webster of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation about the restoration of the Magazine, the colonial capital’s powder magazine.
- 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