Monday, August 16, 2021

Dead Presidents Podcast Episode 16 - Abraham Lincoln & Top 5 Accomplished Presidential Dads

In an epic Season 1 finale, we follow the life of Abraham Lincoln from his humble beginnings to his days as a homespun prairie lawyer, and trace his rise to national prominence as an intellectual leader of the political movement against slavery's expansion. When his 1860 election sparks a secession crisis, one of our least-experienced presidents is thrust into the most difficult situation any president has ever faced and challenged with holding together a fracturing nation. With unflinching leadership through a bloody Civil War, he managed to not only restore the Union but bring a definitive end to the institution of slavery. Also: We count down the Top 5 Accomplished Presidential Dads (the barely literate Thomas Lincoln will not be on the list).

Dead Presidents Podcast Homepage (with links to access the podcast on your favorite podcast app!)






We're very proud of all of our wonderful Episode 16 sponsors:
Baby for adoption from Home for the Friendless – Detroit Free Press (Detroit, MI) – March 19, 1863

Fair to benefit Home for the Friendless – Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL) – November 16, 1861
Look out for pickpockets at the fair – Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL) – November 22, 1861
Wife wanted by lonely guy – New York Daily Herald (New York, NY) – March 22, 1864 
Loyal southern planter seeks good woman – New York Daily Herald (New York, NY) – March 22, 1864
Baron Von Toozly seeks lady of means – Evening Star (Washington, DC) – March 21, 1865
Madame de Cora’s Matrimonial Agency – New York Daily Herald (New York, NY) – June 11, 1863
Chipley on Masturbation – The Courier-Journal (Louisville, KY) – April 22, 1861
L.G. Lloyd’s Furniture & Coffin Warehouse – The Pittsfield Sun (Pittsfield, MA) – September 11, 1862
Charles Kunz, Night Scavenger – Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL) – June 5, 1863

Monday, August 9, 2021

Dead Presidents Podcast - Presidential War #11 - Presidential Rumble

 

In the special season finale of Presidential War, forty-four presidents will enter the squared circle and only one will be left standing. There'll be clotheslines, piledrivers, finishing moves, low blows, cheap shots, and blood on the mat before this thing is over. Get ready for the most electrifying event in presidential entertainment!

Monday, August 2, 2021

Dead Presidents Podcast Episode 15 - James Buchanan & Top 5 Accomplished Presidential Sons

James Buchanan had the experience: lawyer, party leader, Representative, Senator, ambassador to Russia and Britain, and Secretary of State. So how did he fail so badly as president? His long camaraderie with southern leaders, his myopic views on slavery, and his desire to be an imperialist abroad while things were coming apart at home didn't help. By the end of this episode, the antebellum sectional crisis will explode into outright secession and Buchanan will earn his rightful place as the worst president of all time. And we tackle the question of whether our only bachelor president might have been gay. Also: Many president's sons have done great things in their own right. We count down the highest-achievers on our Top 5 Accomplished Presidential Sons.

Dead Presidents Podcast Homepage (with links to access the podcast on your favorite podcast app!)






We're very proud of all of our wonderful Episode 15 sponsors:
Peruvian llama auction – Green-Mountain Freeman (Montpelier, VT) – March 4, 1858

17-year-old girl seeks elderly gentleman – New York Daily Herald (New York, NY) – December 16, 1859

Barnum’s American Museum – Brooklyn Evening Star (Brooklyn, NY) – July 14, 1860

Jacob Heiss and his wife Catherine – The Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD) – September 5, 1860

Mississippi Diarrhea Cordial – Memphis Daily Appeal (Memphis, TN) – July 12, 1860

Beeswax wanted – The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, NC) – July 27, 1860

Thomas Dunn and his wife Esther – Orleans Independent Standard (Irasburgh, VT) – April 10, 1857

Madame Moore, female physician and astrologer – The Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD) – September 5, 1860