Tag: Paines

  • Thomas Paine’s rise and fall

    Thomas Paine’s rise and fall

    Thomas Paine arrived in America in 1774 with little to
    his name and a long record of personal failure behind him. Within a
    year, he wrote Common Sense, one of the most influential political
    pamphlets in history, helping to ignite the American Revolution and
    catapulting Paine into the American history hall of fame.

    But by the end of his life, he was widely reviled,
    politically isolated, and personally abandoned. Once celebrated as
    the voice of liberty, he died an outcast, mourned by only six
    people at his funeral.

    How does one man become the voice of the American
    Revolution and end up forgotten? To explore Paine’s complicated
    legacy, we are joined by Richard Bell, professor of history at the
    University of Maryland and author of
    The American Revolution and the Fate of the World
    .

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Intro

    02:41 Thomas Paine’s early life

    10:32 Paine’s arrival in America

    20:02 What did Paine argue in Common Sense?

    25:11 Why Common Sense was so revolutionary

    36:31 The American Crisis and the Revolutionary
    War

    41:35 Why Paine returned to London and wrote The
    Rights of Man

    49:19 Exile from Britain, imprisonment in France, and
    writing The Age of Reason

    01:01:27 Why America turned its back on Paine

    01:12:09 Paine’s final days

    01:18:50 How should we understand Paine’s legacy
    today?

    01:26:58 Outro

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