Thomas Jefferson in Boston (episode 277)

Thomas Jefferson visited Boston in 1784, arriving in town on June 18th.Ā  That also happened to be the same day when Abigail Adams left her home in Quincy to start making her way to France to join John at his diplomatic posting, though her ship didnā€™t actually leave Boston until the next day.Ā  In this episode, weā€™ll explore how the friendship that was kindled during their single day together in Boston carried on through their shared months in France, their decades of correspondence, and even through the years when Jefferson and John Adams were feuding.Ā  Weā€™ll also examine Thomas Jefferson as an early New England tourist, who explored not only Boston, but also New Haven, Portsmouth, and other key regional population centers, as well as taking a fun look at his epic Boston shopping spree just days before he too boarded a boat to Europe.


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Hostibus Primo Fugatis: The Washington Before Boston Medal (episode 253)

Back in 2015, I was at the Boston Public Library for a special exhibition called ā€œWe Are One,ā€ which showcased items from their collection dating from the French and Indian War to the Constitutional Convention, showing how thirteen fractious colonies forged a single national identity.Ā  Libraries have a lot more than just books, of course.Ā  The BPL has everything from streaming movies and music to historic maps to medieval manuscripts to Leslie Jonesā€™ photos to one remarkable gold medal.Ā  Some of the items on display were breathtaking, like a map hand drawn by George Washington, Paul Revereā€™s hand drawn diagram showing where the bodies fell during the Boston Massacre, and a gorgeous 360 degree panorama showing the view from the top of Beacon Hill during the siege of Boston.Ā  What stopped me in my tracks, though, was a solid gold medal.Ā  It was about three inches in diameter, but it was hard to tell through the thick and probably bulletproof glass protecting it.Ā 

On the side facing me, I could see a bust of George Washington and some words, but they were too small to read.Ā  A special bracket held the medal in front of a mirror, and on the back I could make out more lettering, as well as a cannon and a group of men on horses.Ā  Later, I learned that this was the Washington Before Boston Medal, commemorating the British evacuation of Boston.Ā  It was the first Congressional gold medal, and the first medal of any kind commissioned by the Continental Congress during our Revolutionary War.Ā  This illustrious medalā€™s journey to the stacks of the Boston Public Library will take us from Henry Knoxā€™s cannons at Dorchester Heights to John Adams at the Second Continental congress in Philly to Ben Franklin in Paris to a Confederateā€™s dank basement in West Virginia during the Civil War.Ā Ā 


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