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| Patriotism and Reconstruction: Washington, DC after Conquest and Arson during the War of 1812 |


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讲者:
Anthony S. Pitch Historian, author and journalist
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关于本次演讲: The 24-hour occupation of the nation's capital by British forces during the War of 1812 was arguably the lowest point in American history. The President fled to Virginia hours before the invaders torched the White House, Capitol, State and War Departments, and the Treasury. The colossal buildings that represented the hopes and aspirations of the young Republic were now wizened and hollow in what was nothing more than a 14-year-old glorified village, with 8,000 residents. It should have doomed the infant capital to instant oblivion, with many claiming the moment was opportune to relocate to Philadelphia or elsewhere to save the cost of rebuilding. But a surge of patriotism followed the heroic defense of Fort McHenry, the birth of the anthem, and a monumental victory over the British at New Orleans. It reinvigorated those in Congress invoking the memory of George Washington, who had personally selected the site for a capital and marked the locations of its major public buildings. Local businessmen overcame Congressional critics citing post-war depleted Treasury coffers, by proffering bank loans to fund the costly estimates. Yet even though Washington won the vital reprieve as America's capital, rebuilding would be halting and arduous, slowed and marred by squabbling over designs, construction material, a paucity of creative artists, and financial restraints. But the monumental buildings would rise again, with legislators reconvening in even more splendid comfort, due in no small measure to a President who micromanaged, keenly aware that a rebuilt White House and Capitol would be symbolic of national resilience and unity.
关于讲者: Anthony S. Pitch is the author of The Burning of Washington: The British Invasion of 1814 (United States Naval Institute, 1998), a selection of the History Book Club, with movie rights optioned by National Geographic. Chained Eagle, his biography of the longest-held American POW in North Vietnam, was a main selection of the Military Book Club. Pitch is currently working on a book about the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. He won a history prize while attending The King's School, Canterbury, England, and holds a BA from Rhodes University, South Africa. He was a journalist in England, Africa, and Israel before becoming Associated Press Broadcast Editor in Philadelphia and a senior writer in the books division of US News & World Report in Washington. Pitch has been interviewed by Brian Lamb on Book TV and his anecdotal history tours in Washington, D.C. have been featured on international television and C-SPAN.
以上资料为本影片上传至 MITWORLD 网站上当时所获知的资讯。此影片上传日为: 2002-04-08.
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