Madison's Gift: Five Partnerships That Built America
In his new book, David O. Stewart makes the case for President James Madison's centrality to the nation's founding as he tells the story of his friendships with many of the most influential figures of his time.
Speaker Biography: David O. Stewart is the award-winning author of The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution, Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln's Legacy and American Emperor: Aaron Burr's Challenge to Jefferson, which he presented at the 2012 National Book Festival. Stewart is president of the Washington Independent Review of Books.
For transcript, captions, and more information, visit
Huntsville, Alabama (USA) - History and Facts
Huntsville is a city located primarily in Madison County in the Appalachian region of northern Alabama
Midway Airport to Downtown Chicago Using Elevated Train Orange Line
Philippines Bound is a channel that will help those individuals who are interested in traveling to the Philippines. Gerry and Diana offer valuable information for those who seek to marry a Filipina as well as those who seek to have their Filipina spouse emigrate to the United States on a I-130 Spousal Visa. We also offer good advice to those who are first-time travelers to the Philippines.
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????Walking around NYC ????| Park Avenue Christmas Decorations | Christmas/Holiday Season | 4K
Experience Christmas in New York City as we walk by the shops on Park Avenue ????????.
Here's where you can find all of NYC's Christmas decorations every winter:
For travel tips on where to find NYC's Christmas Markets, Parks, Sitcom Locations & other attractions, click here:
You can learn about the history of New York City here:
You can learn how the American government works here:
New York City (NYC) is known for its scintillating lights, bustling vibe, tall skyscrapers, and melting pot of cultures. But did you know that this sprawling metropolis was once a Dutch trading outpost? As a result, New York was once known as New Amsterdam.
NYC is made up of 5 boroughs: The Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Staten Island, and Queens. New York City is a hub for education, commerce, finance, media, technology, international diplomacy, entertainment, tourism, innovation, art, sports, and fashion.
Must-see attractions in NYC include: Times Square, The Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island, The Empire State Building, Top of the Rock Observation Deck, Rockefeller Center, Grand Central Terminal, Coney Island, The Metropolitan Museum of Art (MET), SoHo, One World Trade Center, Chinatown, Little Italy, The Brooklyn Bridge, The High Line, Chelsea Market, Central Park, American Museum of Natural History, Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum, 9/11 Memorial & Museum, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, United Nations (UN) Headquarters, Yankee Stadium, Broadway, Madison Square Garden, Barclays Center, Fifth Avenue, Columbus Circle, Madison Square Park, Bryant Park, City Hall Park, Battery Park, Flatiron Building, New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), Federal Hall, New York City Hall, Madison Avenue, Park Avenue, Hamilton Grange, Hudson Yards, Pier 17, South Street Seaport, Bank of America Tower, New York Public Library, Chrysler Building, Tudor City, Hudson River, East River, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Museum of American Finance, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), and Washington Square Park.
The headquarters of the United Nations is located in New York City. NYC is home to numerous universities including Columbia University, New York University (NYU), Pace University, Fordham University, St John’s University, City University of New York (CUNY), Barnard College, New York Institute of Technology (NYIT), and The New School. NYC is also home to NASDAQ, and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). John F. Kennedy International Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport, and LaGuardia Airport are the three airports that service New York City. NYC is also home to sports teams such as the New York Rangers, Brooklyn Nets, New York Knicks, New York Liberty, New York Yankees, and New York Mets. The New York Giants and New York Jets play their home games across the Hudson River in New Jersey.
Alabama Mississippi
Mrs. Tara Bristow from Madison Elementary School shows us how to sing Alabama Mississippi. Sing along!
Lyrics:
Alabama, Mississippi
Alabama, New Orleans
Alabama, Mississippi
Shake it own down to New Orleans!
Shake, shake, shake, shake it baby.
Shake, shake, shake, shake it baby.
Shake, shake, shake, shake it baby.
Shake it own down to New Orleans!
Sheryll Cashin: Vision of Biracial Democracy
“........then an African American returned to the Alabama legislature for the first time since Reconstruction. So the party kick-started the Second Reconstruction in the state, and my father did that intentionally to try to recapture what he had learned in his family lore about his own grandfather and robust biracial politics during Reconstruction.”
Huntsville African American History Project (HAAHP)
Sheryll Cashin: Vision of Multiracial Democracy
Interviewed by Jane DeNeefe 2014
Photo courtesy of Sheryll Cashin shows her mother Joan Cashin (swastika sign) with close friend and comrade Myrna Copeland (in sunglasses) marching in Selma.
Sheryll Cashin's book Agitator's Daughter opens in 1969, on a hot day outside the old Greene County, Alabama courthouse, where the party her father founded had just swept a special election. When the National Democratic Party of Alabama (NDPA) got started, Alabama ballots still had the logo of a rooster that said “White Supremacy for the Right.” When Greene County “accidentally” left NDPA candidates off the 1968 ballot, the Supreme Court made them hold a special election in 1969. In this excerpt, Sheryll Cashin tells about her father's vision for the NDPA.
Sheryll: You know, Daddy knew lawyers, lawyers like.... god bless him, Charles Morgan, who was the lawyer for the party. But they would sit down, and they would drink together in private, and they cooked up this idea and they researched the law, and you know, you could charter your own party for like twenty five dollars but no one had ever thought to do it, and they did it.
So, the point was to give these newly registered voters and the progressive whites who resented this rabid racist image that George Wallace was propagating for the state a place to go, and their vision was a multiracial democracy that worked, or a biracial—it was biracial then—but it was to have a place to go, and that was the genesis of it. They had to go to the Supreme Court three times because the Alabama Democratic Party and the State of Alabama resisted putting the candidates names on the ballots. Charles Morgan represented the party, and they ultimately succeeded. They had election in '68, they had a special election for Greene County alone in '69 because the person just left all the NDPA candidates off the ballot and the supreme court ordered a special election, then they had an election in '70 when my father ran against Wallace to head the ticket, then they had one in '72.
The most successful one probably was '70, but '68, '70, between both elections they got four black sheriffs in the Black Belt, they got some probate judges, school board members, I'm saying, African Americans were elected. And then an African American returned to the Alabama legislature for the first time since Reconstruction. So the party kick-started the Second Reconstruction in the state, and my father did that intentionally to try to recapture what he had learned in his family lore about his own grandfather and robust biracial politics during Reconstruction. His grandfather, Herschel V. Cashin, had been in the state legislature, so it was his lifelong ambition to do do this, even though he was just a dentist.
--------------------end of segment----------------
Sheryll Cashin's interview with HAAHP will be available at the archives of the Huntsville-Madison County Public Library.
For more about the Cashins' friend and NDPA co-founder Myrna Copeland, see “Myrna Copeland of Huntsville's Pearly Gates,” Natural Awakenings, April 2012.
and Sheryll's eulogy for Myrna Copeland
For more about Huntsville African American History Project (HAAHP) please find us on Facebook or see our web page.
Full Length Grunches & Grins Theme Song
Grunches & Grins theme song 1974-95. The TV show's website credits the song as Astrocat by Richard Sanders. However, the song is featured on a various artists album and is credited as Hot Line by Emmanuel Vardi & Lenny Hambro which can be heard here: There's also a song called Afrocat by Richard C. Sanders on the album, but it is an entirely different song. It can be heard here: This song is actually Hot Line. ...Featuring hostess Sara McDaris and Tyro B. Ginner, the Alfalfian puppet person from the planet Alfalfa (puppeteer Patti Reny). Filmed in cooperation with the Huntsville-Madison County Public Library at Huntsville ETV on Monte Sano Mountain in The United States of Alabama, America. Grunches & Grins was broadcast on APT Alabama Public Television (PBS) from the early 1970s until the mid-1990s. Video footage borrowed from:
James Madison: Father of the Constitution (1809 - 1817)
James Madison was a tiny fellow, but he packed a political punch. He was absolutely pivotal in the drafting of both the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, and he started the Democratic-Republican Party with Thomas Jefferson, all before becoming president in 1809. We wrap up a lot of the early history of the United States in this clip, so take a look!
Script by Michael Thomas
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ITINERARIO New York ???? giorno 5: BROOKLYN, Grand Central Terminal, Public Library, Bryant Park
In questo quinto giorno di ITINERARIO a NEW YORK, visiteremo prima di tutto la magnifica Grand Central Terminal, ovvero una delle stazioni ferroviarie più grandi del mondo, poi cammineremo fino alla New York Public Library, un luogo bellissimo che trasuda cultura. Una sosta al limitrofo Bryant Park e via verso la St. Patrick Cathedral, maestoso esempio di sacro in una città altrimenti profana. Concluderemo poi la giornata camminando sul ponte di Brooklyn e ammirando dall'omonimo quartiere un bellissimo tramonto sullo skyline della città.
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Five Port St. Lucie officers following us with James Madison Audits. Revisit one year later
Decided to revisit Port St. Lucie after a year Since my last detainment. The day started out good and then five officers decided to follow us around.
January 1, 2019 unlawful detainment
Scholar'd for Life - Alfred McCoy: 'The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power'
The Library is excited to welcome Alfred W. McCoy, Harrington Professor of History at UW-Madison, for the first lecture of 2018 in our continuing Scholar'd for Life series. Professor McCoy will present a lecture related to his new book, In the Shadow of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power.
Alfred W. McCoy is an internationally recognized expert in the history of Southeast Asia who has written extensively on U.S. foreign policy, CIA involvement in the global drug trade, the history of the Philippines, and the uses of torture in CIA interrogations. In 2012, he was awarded of the Wilbur Cross Medal by the Yale Graduate School Alumni Association, as well as the Hilldale Award for Arts & Humanities by UW-Madison.
His many books include: The politics of heroin : CIA complicity in the global drug trade; A Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror; Policing America’s Empire: The United States, the Philippines, and the Rise of the Surveillance State; and Torture and Impunity: The U.S. Doctrine of Coercive Interrogation.
Scholared for Life is a lecture series, now in its third year, presented by the Middleton Public Library in partnership with the UW Madison Speaker's Bureau. Taking the Wisconsin Idea as its starting point, this series aims to promote lifelong learning, intellectual curiosity, and engagement between academics and the community as a whole.
Boston Public Library Flash-mob Aug 12, 2010
A flash-mob dancing to Do-Re- Mi from The Sound of Music in front of the Boston Public Library on Aug 12, 2010. (video taken by Catherine Willis)
Madison-Monroe School No. 16: Day of Remembrance
As we celebrate the 100 years of Madison Monroe School No. 16 – we look back to the Past to find inspiration and guidance. We look to the Present and see how we operate today. We prepare for the future for there will be students and teachers who will follow us and attend Madison Monroe into the next century.
Today, November 16th – during this American Education Week – we celebrate our school’s 100 Anniversary with Our Day of Remembrance.
We become one with the thousands of students and faculty who have sat in the same classrooms, touch the same walls and blackboards, use the same closets, walk the same hallways, use the same bathrooms, and stared out of the same windows.
Today, we will travel back in time to 1916 and ask ourselves why was our School named Madison-Monroe - who were these men? And why were the chosen?
We look to our country. What was happening in 1916? What was the cost of living? What kind of gadgets did people have? What did the cars look like?
We continue our travel through time and realize this school stood and educated students who probably served in World War 1, World War 2, the Korean War, The Cuban Crisis, The Gulf War, up to the war in Pakistan and Afghanistan and many of our past students lived through the Great Depression and watched the United States land a man on the moon. Back in 1916 through the 1920’s many children only went up to 6th grade and then went off to work to help support their families.
Over these 100 years, our country has seen several presidents, many changes in styles, clothing, food, technology. These past years, outstanding people- men and women , movie stars, politicians, sport legends and Civil rights leaders like Dr. Martin Luther King have added to the fabric of our country.
Today, we will have the opportunities to view, learn, think about our past.
Albert Einstein, the great scientist – once said : “As we face the future – we stand on the shoulders of giants.” We learn from the past …
The 100 pieces of art work set in motion by Mrs. Ada Flores, our art teacher, reminds us that we all have potential for greatness but it is up to us to use our gifts and talents
AS you tie your red, white, and blue ribbon to the fish net in front of the stage, remember :
WE ARE ONE … One with the history of this school—of Madison-Monroe School No. 16.
Huntsville Public Library PSA - 1986
Richard Van Vleet for the Huntsville Public Library
1986 Public Service Announcement produced by WHNT-TV, Channel 19
Bobby Hayden: Rules at the Russel Erskine
“.... in 1959 I got fired for walking out the front door, and drinking Coke out of a glass.”
Huntsville African American History Project: Voices of HAAHP
Bobby Hayden: The Rules at the Russel Erskine Hotel
Interviewed by John McKerley in Huntsville
Photo: Scan of vintage postcard of the Russel Erskine Hotel
Before Bobby Hayden became one of the “Magnificent Seven” (the first group of African-American Presidential Honor Guards serving President Kennedy) he went to college at Alabama A&M and worked at the Russel Erskine Hotel. In this excerpt, he describes a subtle act of protest he knew would get him fired: he drank Coca-cola from a real glass, then walked out the front door.
Bobby Hayden: When I got old enough, Jimmie Taylor had a policy at the Russel Erskine Hotel. They didn't hire nothing but college men from A&M. Matter of fact, in 1959 I got fired for walking out the front door, and drinking Coke out of a glass. Only time I've ever been scared in my life because I didn't know what I was gonna tell my mother, because she had told me I better behave. Being on a college campus gives you an advantage. You're meeting people from all over the world, all backgrounds.
John: You said that you got fired for drinking out of a glass and going out the front door.....
Mr. Hayden: In the food establishments of America...the workers were all black males. Cooks, dishwashers, whatever, all black—everything but collecting the money. You could eat all the food you wanted to eat if you ate it off a paper plate. You could drink all the whatever—coffee, cokes, whatever, if you drank out of a paper cup. Even if you washed them, you were not allowed to drink out of a glass or eat off of a plate, so I never ate at none of the places I washed dishes or worked.
John: And this [Russel Erskine] Hotel, this was a nice hotel in downtown Huntsville...
Mr. Hayden: ...it's an apartment complex for senior citizens, Russel Erskine, built in 1925, finished in '28.
John: ….it sounds like a big deal....
Mr. Hayden: In America, it was a big deal across America, that blacks did not eat and drink out of the same utensils as whites did.
John: Right, well I was thinking, for you to land this job, this was a big job?
Mr. Hayden: Well, now, you're making twenty dollars a week, college student, plus the tips, you're making maybe thirty dollars a week—it was a lot of money. But I went out the front door. You had to enter in the basement, take a shower, come up stairs, you had to leave through the basement, you were not allowed to use the front door—that door was for white folks only.
-----------------end of excerpt-------------
HAAHP's entire interview with Bobby Hayden will be available through the archives of Huntsville-Madison County Public Library.
Please subscribe to Voices of HAAHP's YouTube channel for updates, or find Huntsville African American History Project on Facebook.
Huntsville African American History Project (HAAHP) is a digital oral history project exploring the history of race relations in Huntsville, Alabama.
Online Resources Relating to American Indians (2016 Jan. 14)
Meg Hacker, Archives Director for the National Archives at Fort Worth, highlights online resources available relating to American Indians. Broadcast live from Fort Worth into the McGowan Theater in Washington, DC and on YouTube.
TRANSCRIPT: The captioning text is available as a transcript. Send your request to KYR@nara.gov.
PRESENTATION SLIDES:
Learn more about the Know Your Records program at archives.gov/calendar/know-your-records.
SoyBoy Tries To Get Us In Trouble For Filming Librarian Comes And Save Us-1st Amendment Audit
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Telephone message from President John F. Kennedy
Sound recording of President John F. Kennedy's telephone message to the University of Alabama during a rally honoring the Alabama Crimson Tide football team on an undefeated season.
Audio courtesy of John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
Clip edited by Drew Madison
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA - ILLEGAL 'NO GUNS' SIGNS
Jonathon called into the Richard Dixon Show and talked about the illegal guns signs in Birmingham.
The following places have illegal No Guns Signs:
City Hall, The Botanical Gardens, The Birmingham Public Library, ect.
Saudi Arabian Cultural Attache in Madison WI
Madison WI