Friends of Liberty

PODCAST · history

Friends of Liberty

Friends of Liberty is the podcast for people who want the full story of the American Revolution — not just the famous names, but the spies, soldiers, radicals, and forgotten heroes who made independence possible. Three episodes a week, seven to ten minutes each, produced by First Inning Press and written by historian Jim Stovall. Stories you won't hear anywhere else. Subscribe free at friendsofliberty.substack.com and join us in celebrating America's 250th anniversary. friendsofliberty.substack.com

  1. 8

    Episode 2: Valcour Island — The Defeat That Saved the Revolution

    Benedict Arnold — before the treason, before the disgrace — spent the summer of 1776 building a navy from nothing on a wilderness lake. Then he used it to fight a battle he knew he would lose. The story of how losing that battle may have saved the entire Revolution. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit friendsofliberty.substack.com

  2. 7

    Episode 1: John Derby

    April 19, 1775: shots fired at Lexington and Concord. Within hours, two ships are racing toward London — one carrying the British general’s version of events, one carrying the American version. The first battle of the American Revolution didn’t end on a battlefield. It ended in the newspapers of London. And a Salem sea captain named John Derby won it.++++Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GNWKH5DJIn the spring 1775, John Wilkes—Lord Mayor of London—came close to treason.He secretly helped supply French arms to American rebels, an act punishable by death. But Wilkes wasn’t a rogue actor. He was part of a transatlantic network of British radicals, reformers, and opposition politicians who risked everything to support American independence.Their stories have been largely forgotten. Until now.THE MINISTER WHO CHANGED HISTORYWhen Welsh minister Richard Price published his pamphlet Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty in February 1776, it sold 60,000 copies in days—and 180,000 total. Americans devoured it. John Adams said it helped tip the scales toward declaring independence. Yale awarded Price an honorary doctorate alongside George Washington. Yet most Americans today have never heard his name.THE WOMAN WHO DEFIED EVERY CONVENTIONCatharine Macaulay was England’s first female published historian, celebrated across Europe and America for her radical politics. She corresponded with Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, Mercy Otis Warren, and dozens of other patriots. After the war, she became the first English radical to visit the new nation—and spent time at Mount Vernon as Washington’s guest. He called her a lady “whose principles are so much and so justly admired by the friends of liberty.”THE SPY IN LONDONArthur Lee practiced law in London while secretly serving as one of America’s first intelligence agents. He gathered information on British military plans, identified a British double agent, and—at a dinner party hosted by John Wilkes—made the connection with French playwright Beaumarchais that would help secure the alliance with France. It was espionage conducted in drawing rooms and coffeehouses, with the gallows as the price of failure.THE PROPHET PARLIAMENT IGNOREDEdmund Burke delivered the most eloquent speeches of the age warning that war with America would fail—and that France would exploit the conflict. Parliament ignored him. Every prediction came true. When news of Yorktown reached London, Burke’s warnings stood as prophecy fulfilled, but he took no pleasure in vindication.A REVOLUTION ON BOTH SIDES OF THE ATLANTICFriends of Liberty reveals that the American Revolution was never simply a colonial rebellion. It was a transatlantic movement sustained by networks of correspondence, friendship, and shared conviction. Letters crossed the ocean carrying intelligence and ideas. Pamphlets published in London were reprinted in Boston. Dinner parties in Mayfair connected American agents with French financiers. And through it all, British allies faced accusations of treason, social ostracism, and political ruin for supporting a cause they believed was right.Drawing on letters, speeches, pamphlets, and contemporary accounts, historian [Author name] brings these forgotten figures to vivid life—their courage, their friendships with the Founding Fathers, and the real risks they took. This is narrative history at its best: character-driven, richly detailed, and illuminating a dimension of the Revolution that changes how we understand America’s founding.Published for the 250th anniversary of American independence, Friends of Liberty finally gives these remarkable British allies the recognition they deserve.What readers will discover:* The dinner party that helped secure the French alliance* How a single pamphlet sold 180,000 copies This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit friendsofliberty.substack.com

  3. 6

    Friends of Liberty - coming soon

    Friends of Liberty is the podcast for people who want the full story of the American Revolution — not just the famous names, but the spies, soldiers, radicals, and forgotten heroes who made independence possible. Three episodes a week, seven to ten minutes each, produced by First Inning Press and written by historian Jim Stovall. Stories you won't hear anywhere else. Beginning Monday, May 4. Subscribe free at friendsofliberty.substack.com. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit friendsofliberty.substack.com

  4. 5

    The Other Revolution: Inside the Transatlantic Networks

    A two minute introduction to the Friends of Liberty, This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit friendsofliberty.substack.com

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Friends of Liberty is the podcast for people who want the full story of the American Revolution — not just the famous names, but the spies, soldiers, radicals, and forgotten heroes who made independence possible. Three episodes a week, seven to ten minutes each, produced by First Inning Press and written by historian Jim Stovall. Stories you won't hear anywhere else. Subscribe free at friendsofliberty.substack.com and join us in celebrating America's 250th anniversary. friendsofliberty.substack.com

HOSTED BY

Jim Stovall

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!