Three Podcast Episodes
Producing a podcast strikes me as a lot of work, but speaking about Boston history on other folks’ podcasts is always fun.
Here are three episodes I’ve recorded in the last few months. Enjoy all you can.
“The Spark: How Boston Ignited the American Revolution” on The Object of History from the Massachusetts Historical Society
“Boston” on History’s Greatest Cities from History Extra
“Not What You Hurd” on Antiques Roadshow Detours from GBH
Here are three episodes I’ve recorded in the last few months. Enjoy all you can.
“The Spark: How Boston Ignited the American Revolution” on The Object of History from the Massachusetts Historical Society
We ask several historians for their thoughts on why Boston helped light the spark of the American Revolution. Was there something unique about Boston's community or geography that made it prone to a rebellious spirit? We sit down with J. L. Bell, Historian of the Revolutionary Era in Massachusetts, Garrett Dash Nelson, President & Head Curator at the Leventhal Map & Education Center at the Boston Public Library, and Kathryn Lasdow, Assistant Professor of History and Director of Public History at Suffolk University, to answer this question.I’d already been mulling about “Why did the Revolutionary conflict flare up in Boston?” when the invitation to explore that question arrived. Hear my threefold answer and more.
“Boston” on History’s Greatest Cities from History Extra
As one of the oldest cities in the United States, Boston played a pivotal role in the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, as well as the signing of the Declaration of Independence that followed. In this episode of History’s Greatest Cities, Paul Bloomfield is joined by writer John Bell to explore the storied history of the capital of Massachusetts. Together, they wander through Boston’s oldest neighbourhoods, tracing the story of this harbour city from its pre-colonial roots, through Puritan settlement, to its rise as a major port and administrative centre of the British Atlantic world.This podcast asks its guests to answer a series of questions, from major events to foods a visitor mustn’t miss.
“Not What You Hurd” on Antiques Roadshow Detours from GBH
In the world of rare silver, American Colonial silver is the stuff collectors dream of. So, when a pair of drinking vessels or “canns,” complete with intricate engraving by a master Boston craftsman, were discovered during ROADSHOW’s visit to Akron in 2023, expert Nick Dawes examined the cups’ clues to reveal both the silver’s early-American history and extraordinary value. But does Nick’s tale of the tankards hold water? Join host Adam Monahan as he searches for the untarnished truth, picking through the many stories, half-truths, and wishful legends in a quest for what may or may not have been lost to history forever.My voice pops up occasionally on this episode, leaving more time for the fine local historians Joel Bohy and Caitlin DeAngelis.

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