Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jul 6
Historians Offer Hope for America’s 250th Birthday as NBC Revisits Crises From 600,000 Civil War Deaths
Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jul 6

Historians Offer Hope for America’s 250th Birthday as NBC Revisits Crises From 600,000 Civil War Deaths

3 articles · Updated · POLITICO · Jul 6

Summary

  • Doris Kearns Goodwin, Ken Burns and Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch used an NBC July 4 special to frame the nation’s 250th birthday through past crises and a message of resilience.
  • Goodwin pointed to the Civil War’s more than 600,000 deaths, the Great Depression’s 1-in-4 unemployment and the uncertainty of early World War II to argue Americans have endured darker periods without knowing the outcome.
  • Burns said history remains the best guide to the present, arguing today’s political divisions are serious but thinner than splits during the Revolutionary War, Civil War and Vietnam era.
  • The special also looked back to the 1976 bicentennial with archival footage of then-Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis, linking the coming 250th anniversary to earlier national milestones.

Insights

As America marks 250 years, is national resilience a historical lesson or a lost art?
Can the stories of past crises truly provide the blueprint for navigating today’s complex divisions?