Blog

Featured

How Colonial Trades Shaped the American Revolution

Colonial Trades
Portrait of Paul Revere by John Simpleton Copley, 1768 [Source: Wikimedia Commons]

[Guest Author: Rachel Rodewald returns to Writing for the Public Square with a newly contributed post about colonial trades for the Countdown America 250 series. Rachel holds a Master’s Degree in History from George Mason University.]

The story of America’s founding is the story of ordinary citizens engaged in a wide variety of colonial trades—silversmiths, blacksmiths, printers, coopers, ropemakers, carpenters, tailors—who came together in pursuit of a free and independent nation. Most remain nameless, lost to the ages. But a few, like Paul Revere, are the stuff of legend.

Colonial Tradesman Paul Revere

When we think about Paul Revere, he’s usually atop a galloping horse. Signaled in the middle of the night by fellow Sons of Liberty member Robert Newman and a lantern hung in the Old North Church, Revere rides to alert nearby residents that “the British are coming!” This indelible image of the celebrated patriot, immortalized by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere, has been held by generations of schoolchildren and adults.

Continue reading “How Colonial Trades Shaped the American Revolution”
Featured

Unvarnished and Irresistible History

History Unvarnished and Irresistible
Historic Independence Hall in Philadelphia—birthplace of America’s Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution

Author and columnist Peggy Noonan wrote a terrific piece in the Wall Street Journal recently about the importance of knowing history. She was reviewing a collection of essays, interviews and speeches by the late historian David McCullough called History Matters (pre-orders available here).

Noonan made an interesting observation about our understanding of history. She writes, “You can’t be dreamy about the past and say, ‘It was nice then.’ It was never nice, it was made by human beings. You can’t say, ‘People were better then.’ They weren’t.”

It’s true, we do tend to romanticize the past. We like our heroes strong and resolute, our villains dastardly. On a recent trip to Philadelphia, I realized how strong a gravitational pull nostalgia exerts. Like most Americans, I delight in the stories and characters of our founding. Paul Revere’s midnight ride. Betsy Ross stitching the first American flag. General Washington leading the Continental Army into battle against the Redcoats.

The problem with nostalgia is that it oversimplifies. It amplifies the “dreamy” and glosses over the unsavory bits. To really honor and learn from the American story (or any historical account for that matter) requires more than sentimentality. We need the unvarnished version. Which is what makes Rick Atkinson’s book The British are Coming such an irresistible read.

Continue reading “Unvarnished and Irresistible History”
Featured

New Colors for a New Nation: A Patriotic Display

Washington's PATRIOTIC crossing of the Deleware
Washington Crossing the Delaware by Emanuel Leutze, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC via Wikimedia Commons

[GUEST AUTHOR: Rachel Rodewald contributed this patriotic post as a special installment of Writing for the Public Square. Rachel holds a Master’s Degree in History from George Mason University.]

Flags and banners remain a tangible expression of the patriotism our Founding Fathers inspired generations ago.

Imagine you are a soldier in the Continental Army and you’ve just scored a victory on the battlefield. You want to rally with your peers to celebrate your success, but the confusion of the moment—the literal fog of war—has you turned around and lost. Then, in the distance, you spot it. Your regimental flag with its distinctive colors and symbols waves in the smoke-filled air—a patriotic beacon of hope and brotherhood.

Thankfully, today we associate our flags more with celebration and patriotism and less with the stress and anxiety of war. The American flag and some state and local flags are now ubiquitous and inspiring. They fly in public settings like post offices and banks, baseball games and parades, political rallies and memorial services. We even wear them on patriotic shirts and hats.

We display and maintain our flags with specific, respectful criteria. A familiarity with foreign flags even helps us better understand international sporting events and helps us connect current events to impressions we might have about those countries.

So why were flags and banners so important to an early American nation? And how did they become such a powerful part of the American story?

Continue reading “New Colors for a New Nation: A Patriotic Display”
Featured

Revolutionary Summer: Lessons for America’s Semiquincentennial

America's Semiquincentennial
[Photo: The Battle of Long Island by Alonzo Chappel, 1858; Brooklyn Historical Society via Wikimedia Commons]

In celebration of America’s semiquincentennial, Countdown America 250 has created a curated reading list on the American revolution and the story of America’s founding. Each month, we consider one of the books on this list to better understand our own history, rediscover our foundational values, and gaze with hope into our future. Click here for a complete reading list.

Countdown America 250 and the journey to America’s semiquincentennial begins with the explosive summer of 1776. In his book Revolutionary Summer: The Birth of American Independence, Joseph J. Ellis zooms in on a critical stretch of time that shifted history and shaped a nation.

Unlike many sweeping Revolutionary War histories, the narrow scope of Revolutionary Summer creates a focused and tension-filled narrative. Ellis invites readers to step into a compressed time frame in which political and military leaders alike were “improvising on the edge of catastrophe.” They did not have the advantage history affords us. We know the outcome; they did not.

As Ellis tells the story, the summer of 1776 was the “crescendo moment in American history.” More than dry chronology, Revolutionary Summer explores a dual timeline rife with intensity and human emotion. Ellis unpacks the political maneuvering in Philadelphia alongside the harsh military realities unfolding in New York. Themes of fragile unity, political and military uncertainty, and character under pressure dominate the narrative.

Though written in 2013, Revolutionary Summer is a relevant read in the lead-up to America’s semiquincentennial. Ellis’ analysis invites comparison between the challenges encountered by America’s founders and the seemingly constant conflict of our current moment.

Following are a few highlights from Revolutionary Summer along with questions for further reflection.

Continue reading “Revolutionary Summer: Lessons for America’s Semiquincentennial”
Featured

America’s Hopeful Vision Transcends Political Division

Political Division: Friends or Foes

In this semiquincentennial year, I’ve heard more than a few folks say they wish they felt more celebratory about America at 250 but political division gets in the way. So much rancor and disagreement around every corner. It’s true, we live in a highly polarized moment of history. But I’m not sure that makes us unique, let alone defines us. In fact, today’s political climate bears an uncanny resemblance to that of early American politics.

I submit the case of two Founding Fathers: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. The same duo that brought us the Declaration of Independence, also introduced political division. They shared the same vision for American independence but held intensely different views as to the nature of the new republic. For decades they worked in tandem. Then for years, they found themselves at cross-purposes, and their bond of friendship slowly unraveled. In time, the two would rekindle their long-held amity. The full arc of their friendship provides a sympathetic model for how we each might approach our own feelings in the countdown to America’s 250th.

Continue reading “America’s Hopeful Vision Transcends Political Division”
Featured

Reel Revolution: How Film and Documentaries Capture the Story of America’s Founding

Reel Revolution: How Film and Documentaries Capture the Story of America's Founding

Capturing the story of America’s Founding has long captivated the public imagination. For nearly 250 years, our origin story has inspired both national pride and ongoing debate. From classrooms to pop culture, this formative era has been the subject of bestsellers, biographies, and scholarly research. But it is on the screen–in film and documentaries–where the ideals, contradictions and bold personalities of the Founding Fathers are most vividly brought to life.

More than words on a page, films and documentaries allow viewers to experience the past and watch history unfold. They transport audiences to the corner of a candlelit tavern where they hear the whispers of revolution. Or moviegoers might witness the heated discourse of delegates debating first principles in an equally heated Philadelphia state house. They might even encounter the heart-stopping moments of combat between American patriots and British Red Coats.

The storytelling power of film and documentaries makes the Founding feel more immediate, tangible, and relatable. Of course, good film and good documentaries must strike a balance between entertainment and truth. When done well, the result is compelling drama and an entry point for deeper understanding and exploration. When off-kilter, the outcome feels more like sentimental kitsch, tired tropes, or perilous revisionism.

Continue reading “Reel Revolution: How Film and Documentaries Capture the Story of America’s Founding”
Featured

America’s Money Problem

America's Money Problem

America’s money problems didn’t start with today’s $36 trillion national debt (though that’s a whopper of a problem). In fact, if George Washington were telling the story, he might say that money woes nearly cost America her independence from the start.

For eight long years, despite repeated pleas to Congress, Washington was forced to bootstrap a half-starved, rag-tag, and disease-ridden Continental Army. As Joseph J. Ellis writes in Revolutionary Summer: The Birth of American Independence, “The Continental Army was kept on life support but was never provided the money and men Washington requested, even though the resources for a larger and better-equipped army were readily available.”

In part, the brick wall Washington repeatedly ran into centered on a reluctance among delegates to embrace the idea of a central army. A powerful military was one of their chief grievances against the British Crown after all.

Continue reading “America’s Money Problem”
Featured

America’s Countdown to 250!

America's Countdown to 250

It’s true. America’s countdown to 250 has begun. With the arrival of July 4th festivities this week, America steps into an important year of celebration and reflection. In 12 short months, we will mark the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the beginning of our bold, beautiful, and often boisterous nation.

In the current climate, the lead-up to our semiquincentennial feels equal parts momentous and fractious. How do we prepare ourselves for this historic milestone? A short answer…crack open a book!

Continue reading “America’s Countdown to 250!”
Featured

A Few F-words for 4th of July

A Few F-words for 4th of July

Patriotism has taken a hit in recent years. Especially during the 4th of July. In some circles it’s fashionable to slam the U. S. of A. — to punctuate its flaws and denigrate its virtues. Other camps seem to have confused love of country with an exaggerated sense of purpose. Either way, decorating the porch with red, white and blue bunting feels a little off kilter this year.

I’m old enough to remember the national exuberance during the Bicentennial celebration in 1976. That summer, tall ships filled New York and Boston harbors. Johnny Cash served as Grand Marshall at the U.S. Bicentennial parade in our nation’s capital on the 4th of July. There was an official Bicentennial logo and commemorative postage stamps, coins, license plates and other merchandise.

Disneyland and Disney World hosted America on Parade. Local communities painted benches, fire hydrants, mailboxes and phone booths in patriotic colors. The popular Schoolhouse Rock! series created America Rock to teach youngsters about American history and government. (Throughout the year, I proudly wore the shirt my mom hand embroidered using the Betsy Ross animated character from the series – seen here.)

That summer, the wave of patriotism drenched America from coast to coast. We loved it. It felt refreshing to celebrate our nation on the 4th of July. To acknowledge our history with a sense of accomplishment even as we emerged from some difficult moments including the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal.

By many accounts, America is having a difficult moment right now, in 2023. We are polarized. We are mean-spirited. We are worried.

Which is precisely why the 4th of July is a good time to pause and ponder the fundamental and enduring values we continue to hold dear. It’s okay to do that even as we acknowledge our shortcomings. And it’s possible to respectfully observe nearly 250 years of achievement from a posture of humility.

Here’s a start. A carefully curated selection of F-words worthy of celebration this 4th of July, from the pages of our own history:

Continue reading “A Few F-words for 4th of July”

Wisdom for a Distracted People

Wisdom for a Distracted People|Writing for the Public Square

With the new year comes the promise of ever-greater distractions in our fast-moving world. So far, 2025 seems to be the year of over-the-top headlines: devastating fires and frigid arctic storms; a funeral for one president and the anticipated inauguration of another; wars and rumors of wars. All the while, cultural buzzwords like artificial intelligence, algorithms and chatbots occupy greater territory in the national lexicon.

Most of us just try to keep pace these days. But as big news unfolds in this fast-knowledge era, I can’t help wonder, where do any of us find wisdom in the current moment? In an age where disasters—natural and those of the human variety—seem to happen with greater frequency and intensity, what does wisdom even look like? When institutional trust has been fractured in so many ways and the whole of creation seems to be groaning, how do we cultivate and share wisdom with one another?

A Seat at the Table

Ben Pilgreen has a worthy idea. He calls it the wisdom table, and I write about it in my latest piece for The Washington Institute of Faith, Vocation and Culture. In his book, Bring it Out, Pilgreen writes, “Your future is going to be determined by the people seated at your wisdom table.” He continues, “When you pursue a major calling in your life, it really matters who is in it with you.” In other words, who is holding you accountable? Who is whispering in your ear? Who do you look to as a role model?

Proverbs 13:20 reminds us that “whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm.” At the dawn of a new year, who are the best candidates to have a seat at your wisdom table?

I explore this theme in my long-form article, Finding Wisdom in a Distracted World, which I invite you to read and share as you set your own wisdom table for 2025.

Contentment: Closer than You Think

Contentment: Closer than You Think

Maybe it’s just me, but it feels like a lot of folks are running low on contentment these days. Can we even define that word anymore? Would we recognize it if we saw it?

In his letter to the believers in Philippi, the Apostle Paul writes, “I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or want.”

In our current era of political polarization, institutional mistrust, fractured friendships, and economic uncertainty, wouldn’t it be great to know what Paul knows?

Boundaries

According to author and Christian speaker Sara Hagerty, the secret to contentment is a lot closer than you might think. In her book The Gift of Limitations: Finding Beauty in Your Boundaries, Hagerty makes the counter-intuitive argument that we discover true contentment when we stop trying to overcome our limitations and instead embrace them, even revel in them.

Continue reading “Contentment: Closer than You Think”