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天涯社区官网 history series to commemorate America鈥檚 250th birthday

Mar 05, 2026


To help celebrate America鈥檚 250th birthday this year, St. Bonaventure University鈥檚 History Department will present a series of public programs through March and April.

United_States_Declaration_of_IndependenceFrom John Adams and Revolutionary-era Boston to George Washington鈥檚 long shadow, presenters will invite audiences to reconsider how we remember the Revolution today.

鈥淛uly Fourth this year will mark 250 years since the Declaration of Independence was finalized,鈥 said Dr. Phillip Payne, chair of the History Department. 鈥淲e wanted to invite members of the community to join us in commemorating that event. It鈥檚 a question we can all think about: What does the American Founding mean to us today?鈥

The programs, which are free and open to the public, will each begin at 7 p.m. Light refreshments will be served.

The programs will also be available to watch via Zoom. For Zoom links, visit the History Department鈥檚 blog, .

Wednesday, March 18: 鈥淎tlas of Independence: John Adams and the American Revolution,鈥 Dr. Chris MackowskiLocation: The Great Room, McGinley-Carney Center for Franciscan Ministries Center

Chris MackowskiWhen the Continental Congress approved the Declaration of Independence, no one doubted who was responsible. 鈥淭he man to whom the country is most indebted for the great measure of independence is Mr. John Adams,鈥 said one delegate. 鈥淚 call him the Atlas of American independence.鈥

Born of humble means outside Boston, Massachusetts, Adams鈥檚 work ethic led him to become one of the colony鈥檚 most successful attorneys. Yet he burned with a powerful ambition and yearned for more. 鈥淚 never shall shine, till some animating Occasion calls forth all my Powers,鈥 he fretted. Festering tensions with Great Britain provided the occasion Adam longed for, and soon he found himself at the center of the storm, thrust onto the national stage where all his 鈥淧owers鈥 transformed him into the intellectual architect of American independence. Perhaps more than any other American, he rose to the historical moment, urging his contemporaries into the unknown future.

Mackowski is a writing professor in St. Bonaventure鈥檚 Jandoli School of Communication and the author of the new book 鈥淎tlas of Independence: John Adams and the American Revolution.鈥 Copies of his book will be available for purchase at the presentation.

Monday, March 23: 鈥淓veryday Voices and Revolution,鈥 St. Bonaventure student research panel moderated by Christopher Dalton
Location: Walsh Auditorium, Walsh Science Center

Christopher DaltonThis student research panel turns to the Revolution as it was actually lived. What did resistance sound like? How did politics enter the home?

One student explores the world of sailors鈥 and commoners鈥 poetry and popular songs, showing how music at sea helped shape identity, protest and revolutionary feeling. Another examines the daily realities faced by Loyalist and Patriot women, revealing how domestic labor, family loyalty and survival became deeply political. By bringing together sound and household life, this panel invites us to reconsider the American Revolution not simply as a political rupture, but as a transformation of ordinary experience.

The panel will feature presenter Alex Payne speaking on 鈥淭he Record of Thought of Oppressed People During the Age of Revolution鈥 and Kayla Krupski speaking on 鈥淢aintaining the Chaos: The Complexities of Domestic Life for Loyalist and Patriot Women Amidst the American Revolution 鈥 1752-1789.鈥

Dalton, a senior lecturer in the History Department, supervises student work in the Historical Methods and Historiography class.

Payne is a junior Theology and Franciscan Studies and History double-major from Shinglehouse, Pennsylvania, with a minor in Classics. Krupski is a junior history major from Hamburg, New York, with a minor in Classics.

Monday, March 30: 鈥淕eorge Washington鈥檚 Shadow: Remembering and Contesting the Revolution,鈥 Dr. Phillip Payne
Location:
Walsh Auditorium, Walsh Science Center

dr-phillip-payneAs we approach the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, we are reminded that there are political stakes beyond the simple pleasures of the Fourth of July with its emphasis on picnics, fireworks and hot dogs. From such ideological distant perspectives as Constitutional originalism and the 1619 Project, Americans live in the shadow of the founding moment. For a generation (if not more), George Washington stood as an exemplar of republican virtue, but our recent culture wars have fractured the meaning and legacy of the Revolution. This, as we will learn, is nothing new.

Payne is a professor of History as well as chair of St. Bonaventure鈥檚 History Department. One of his primary areas of interest is how Americans remember their own history.

Monday, April 13: 鈥淲inning the War: Why American Victory was So Remarkable,鈥 panel discussion with historians from Emerging Revolutionary War
Location: 201 Plassmann Hall (note the different location from other programs in the series)

American victory in the Revolution seems inevitable to us now, but at the time and on the battlefields, victory seemed anything but assured. How did America overcome the odds, particularly after several decisive defeats? Join a panel of historians from the award-winning digital history platform Emerging Revolutionary War (ERW) for an interactive discussion about key military moments that kept the dream of independence alive.

Panelists include:

  • Phill Greenwalt, author of 鈥淭he Winter that Won the War: The Winter Encampment at Valley Forge,鈥 co-author of 鈥淎 Single Blow: The Battles of Lexington and Concord,鈥 and co-author of the forthcoming 鈥淎 Hard-Bought Victory: The Battle of Bunker Hill.鈥
  • Mark Maloy, author of 鈥淰ictory or Death: The Battles of Trenton and Princeton, 鈥淭o the Last Extremity: The Battles for Charleston,鈥 and a forthcoming book on the battles for New York City.
  • Rob Orrison, co-author of 鈥淎ll That Can Be Expected: The Battle of Camden鈥 and 鈥淎 Single Blow: The Battles of Lexington and Concord.鈥

Greenwalt and Maloy are both historians with the National Park Service, and Orrison serves as ERW鈥檚 chief historian.

Monday, April 20: 鈥淲hy Boston? A New Economic Interpretation of the American Revolution,鈥 Dr. Stephen Pitt
Location: Walsh Auditorium, Walsh Science Center

Dr. Steven PittThe sparks of revolution swirled in Boston, and the language of liberty coursed through its streets in the decade leading up to the Declaration of Independence. The Stamp Act Crisis, Townshend Acts boycotts and riots, the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, and the Intolerable Acts reinforced and compounded grievances over economic decline, taxation, Navigation Acts enforcement, impressment, and imperial overreach.

The port became the epicenter of resistance with the rise of the Sons of Liberty and eventual converts like John Adams. But why Boston? Why not Philadelphia, New York or Charleston, South Carolina? The answer lies in Boston鈥檚 unique and complex religious, political, military and economic trajectory that promised opportunity but led to frequent disillusionment.

At every turn, Bostonians from all classes tried to escape rigged economic systems (sometimes even systems they created), but conflicting internal desires and external forces thwarted their plans and shifted economic power to neighboring ports. By 1775, economic self-preservation propelled Bostonians onto the revolutionary path. 

Pitt is an associate professor of History at St. Bonaventure, focusing on colonial and Revolution-era America.

Monday, April 27: 鈥淭he Revolution Today,鈥 open panel discussion
Location:
Walsh Auditorium, Walsh Science Center

After spending five weeks exploring the American Revolution, our historians will gather for a final panel discussion and open Q&A with the audience. What themes have emerged from our series? What questions have the founders raised for us? What does the American Revolution mean to us today? What is our own role in remembering America鈥檚 250th birthday? Join us to take part in the conversation.

The university鈥檚 America 250 Series is sponsored by the History Department, the Jandoli School of Communication and Emerging Revolutionary War. For more information, contact Dr. Phil Payne at ppayne@sbu.edu.