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    Have you ever stopped to think about how the United States became a manufacturing nation? Have you ever wondered how the United States developed not just products, but the technologies, knowledge, and machinery necessary to manufacture or produce various products?

    Lindsay Schakenbach Regele has.

    Lindsay is an Associate Professor of History at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and the author of Manufacturing Advantage: War, the State, and the Origins of American Industry, 1776-1848, and she joins us today to lead our exploration into the early American origins of industrialization.

    Show Notes: https://www.benfranklinsworld.com/298


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    379 Women Healers in Early America

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    378 Everyday Black Living in Early America

    378 Everyday Black Living in Early America

    When we study the history of Black Americans, especially in the early American period, we tend to focus on slavery and the slave trades. But focusing solely on slavery can hinder our ability to see that, like all early Americans, Black Americans were multi-dimensional people who led complicated lives and lived a full range of experiences that were worth living and talking about.

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    377 Phillis Wheatley & the Playwright

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    376 Cotton Mather's Spanish Lessons

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