John Farrell

Clarence Darrow: Attorney for the Damned

Original air date: March 16, 2012

“John A. Farrell draws on previously unpublished correspondence and memoirs to offer a candid account of Darrow’s divorce, affairs, and disastrous finances; new details of his feud with his law partner, the famous poet Edgar Lee Masters; a shocking disclosure about one of his most controversial cases; and explosive revelations of shady tactics he used in his own trial for bribery. Clarence Darrow is a sweeping, surprising portrait of a leg­endary legal mind.”

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Jonathan Eig

Opening Day: The Story of Jackie Robinson’s First Season

Original air date: March 9, 2012

April 15, 1947 was seven years before Brown vs the Board of Education, eight years before Rosa Parks and sixteen years before Martin Luther King Jr. spoke about having a dream. But on April 15, 1947, Jackie Robinson, a black man, stepped onto the diamond at Ebbets field in Brooklyn, New York and became the first African American to play professionally for a major league baseball team…

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Laurence Bergreen

Columbus: The Four Voyages

Original air date: March 2, 2012

In the first major biography of the iconic explorer in more than sixty years, Bergreen shows us the madness and genius that only those who traveled with him could have seen. Covering his four epic voyages, it’s the Columbus you didn’t learn about in school.

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David O. Stewart

American Emperor: Aaron Burr’s Challenge to Jefferson’s America

Original air date: February 17, 2012

“In this vivid and brilliant biography, David Stewart describes Aaron Burr, the third vice president, as a daring and perhaps deluded figure who shook the nation’s foundations in its earliest, most vulnerable decades.

In 1805, the United States was not twenty years old, an unformed infant. The government consisted of a few hundred people. The immense frontier swallowed up a tiny army of 3,300 soldiers. Following the Louisiana Purchase, no one even knew where the nation’s western border lay. Secessionist sentiment flared in New England and beyond the Appalachians.

Burr had challenged Jefferson, his own running mate, in the presidential election of 1800. Indicted for murder in the dueling death of Alexander Hamilton in 1804, he dreamt huge dreams. He imagined an insurrection in New Orleans, a private invasion of Spanish Mexico and Florida, and a great empire rising on the Gulf of Mexico, which would swell when America’s western lands seceded from the Union. For two years, Burr pursued this audacious dream, enlisting support from the General-in-Chief of the Army, a paid agent of the Spanish king, and from other western leaders, including Andrew Jackson.”

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Joshua Kendall

The Forgotten Founding Father: Noah Webster’s Obsession and the Creation of an American Culture

Original air date: February 10, 2012

“Noah Webster’s name is now synonymous with the dictionary he created, but although there is much more to his story than that singular achievement, his rightful place in American history has been forgotten over time. Webster hobnobbed with various Founding Fathers and was a young confidant of George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, among others. He started New York City’s first daily newspaper, predating Alexander Hamilton’s New York Post. His “blue- backed speller” for schoolchildren, his first literary effort, sold millions of copies and influenced early copyright law. He helped found Amherst College and served as a state representative for both Connecticut and Massachusetts. But perhaps most important, Webster was an ardent supporter of a unified, definitively American culture, distinct from the British, at a time when the United States of America were anything but unified-and his dictionary of American English is a testament to that.”

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