June 23, 1972. President Richard Nixon’s men broke into the Watergate complex just six days earlier. He’s attempting some damage control, but in between meetings with his staff, Nixon signs a new bill into law – the Educational Amendments of 1972. He isn’t aware of it at the time, but Title IX of this law will change women’s sports forever. The bill’s passag ... Show More
Yesterday
William Parker’s War on Slave Catchers
April 3, 1851. A man who escaped slavery is grabbed off the streets of Boston and thrown into a carriage. He fights back, shouting to the crowd, but it doesn’t matter. Under a new federal law, even the North isn’t safe. The Fugitive Slave Act has turned cities like Boston into hu ... Show More
38m 49s
Mar 23
The First Robot
March 29th, 1923. A new play opens in Berlin, and quietly changes the future. Onstage are workers who never tire, never complain, and never stop. They’re faster, stronger, and more efficient than humans in every way. They’re called robots. A sci-fi play born out of war and indust ... Show More
32m 40s
Mar 16
HTW Live: Busting the Myths of Irish Immigration — Recorded at the Tenement Museum
March 18, 1879. A crowd gathers around an indoor track in Brooklyn, NY, as an Irish immigrant named Bartholomew O’Donnell attempts a strange feat: walking 80 miles in 26 hours. Newspapers claim he’s eighty years old. Lap after lap, he circles the track: smoking a pipe, sipping ho ... Show More
40m 56s
May 2024
336. La politisation du sport (les mercredis des révolutions), avec Jérôme Latta et François Da Rocha Carneiro
Séance du mercredi 15 mai 2024 pour la 7e saison des “mercredis des révolutions”, l’Université populaire de la société d’histoire de 1848 à la mairie du XVIIIe arrondissement de Paris, en partenariat avec Mediapart, Politis et Paroles d’histoire. Les Jeux Olympiques de Paris, je ... Show More
1h 15m