On this 1776 Club broadcast, Clay & David discuss Alexander Hamilton; Lin-Manuel Miranda's Broadway musical, Hamilton; and related topics, including Jason Frank and Isaac Kramnick's June 2016 opinion piece in the New York Times, "What ‘Hamilton’ Forgets About Hamilton".
Interested in becoming a member of the 1776 Club and gaining access to exclusive episodes like this one? Visit our episode archive to learn more.
The 1776 Club includes bonus material and unlimited access to the episode archive which, when completed, will date back to the origins of the show in the early 2000s — about 15 years of the Thomas Jefferson Hour.
Your support keeps the show running and helps it grow. Please note that membership in the 1776 Club is not tax-deductible. To make a tax-deductible donation to The Thomas Jefferson Hour, Inc., visit our donate page.
You can listen to the Original Broadway Cast Recording of 'Hamilton' on Spotify.
More From the Thomas Jefferson Hour
"Alexander Hamilton, Portrait" c. 1898 - 1931. Public domain from the New York Public Library Digital Collections.
David speaks with President Jefferson about the "original argument" between Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton concerning whether or not the United States should have a national bank. Jefferson felt this was in a sense unconstitutional and Hamilton believed we needed a flexible constitution.
Clay is joined by Darren Staloff, the author of Hamilton, Adams, Jefferson: The Politics of Enlightenment and the American Founding. In this incisive book, Staloff writes that America owes its guiding political traditions to three Founding Fathers whose lives embodied the collision of European enlightenment with the founding of America.
Lindsay Chervinsky joins Clay Jenkinson this week for the first of a series of programs titled "Ten Things." The conversations center on historical figures from the founding era, and ten things you may or may not know about them.
On February 25, 2020, Clay Jenkinson appeared before a sold out crowd at the TCC Roper Performing Arts Center in Norfolk, Virginia for his new performance, “Talking out of Tights,” an evening of humor and storytelling in which Jenkinson reflects on the comedic side of a life performing as Thomas Jefferson – the surprising encounters, the wigs, the arrests (!) – all for the love of the humanities. The show was sponsored by WHRV public radio. On this week's Jefferson Hour we hear excerpts from that performance, and also answer listener questions.