(Lucy) Rebecca Gratz helped to shape the vibrant cultural life of Philadelphia after the Revolutionary War. A second-generation immigrant, she supported artists and public institutions, and pioneered co-ed religious and cultural education for American Jewish children. She lived a remarkable life, and lived long enough to be photographed. She is also sometimes credited with being the real-life prototype for one of the nineteenth century’s most popular heroines, Sir Walter Scott’s Rebecca.
Owney: Star Pup of the US Railway Mail Service
Medieval Coroners
Dressing Marie Antoinette
Tadeusz Kościuszko, Part II: Life and Legend
Tadeusz Kościuszko, Part I: International Icon, Revolutionary Hero
Harry Washington
Murder and the Mignonette
History for the Holidays III
The Many Adventures of Pope Innocent III
Kościuszko Squadron
History for Halloween X
The Witchcraft Trial of Alice Kyteler
Leo Frank and the Murder of Mary Phagan
The Cold Truth: A History of Refrigeration
Titus Oates, a Popish Plot, and the Mysterious Murder of Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey
A Royal Son: Geoffrey, duke of Brittany
True Crime on Stage in Shakespeare’s England
Wyatt Earp and a Heavyweight Fix
William Mumler and Spirit Photography in the 19th century
Marlene Dietrich’s Scandalous Trousers
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
The Rest Is History
Everything Everywhere Daily