Saturday, September 6, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • Reminder: at noon on September 10, the Supreme Court Historical Society will sponsor a virtual lecture and conversation with John Q. Barrett, “Away Without Leave but Back in Washington, Briefly: Nazi Prosecutor Justice Robert H. Jackson on the Road to Nuremberg, September 1945.”  Register here.  
  • The Supreme Court Historical Society’s latest episode in its Breaking History video series treats “two extraordinary behind-the-scenes stories from the latest Journal of Supreme Court History” concerning Reed v. Reed (1971) and Miranda v. Arizona (1966)
  • In an episode of Historians & Their Histories, the Massachusetts Historical Society spoke with Cornelia H. Dayton, University of Connecticut, about her her research into the life of John Peters, the husband of acclaimed poet Phillis Wheatley, as well as abour Professor Dayton’s “path to becoming an historian, her early interest in constitutional law, and the challenges of researching subaltern subjects, such as Peters, who left few firsthand accounts.”  The transcript is here.
  • Over at ESCLH Blog: a post on the "(Dis)continuity of Legal Systems in Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland after WWII: Difficult Heritage." 
  • Also on Monday, September 8, Aziz Rana, BC Law, will give the 2025 Kops Freedom of the Press Lecture, "The Constitution in crisis: how Americans came to idolize a document that fails them," at Cornell University, from 12-1 p.m.  More.  
  • In C-SPAN’s “Bell Ringer” series, Joseph Crespino, Emory University, talks about “the changes in society, politics, institutions and the U.S. Senate in the 20th and 21st centuries.”  
  • Keith Whittington, Yale Law School, will deliver the Constitution Day address at Washington and Lee University at 5 p.m. on September 18 on “By Birth Alone: The Original Meaning of Birthright Citizenship in the Fourteenth Amendment" (More). 
  • Notre Dame Law’s notice of the second ASLH/Notre Dame Graduate Legal History Colloquium.
  • A columnist praises the appointment of Lee Strang to direct the new Salmon P. Chase Center for Civics, Culture, and Society at the Ohio State University because the center promises to address "the partisan biases that have oozed into the teaching of American history and civic responsibility" (Columbus Dispatch).   
  • The 14th Amendment Center for Law and Democracy at the Howard University School of Law has launched a newsletter, The Refounding.
  • ICYMI:  How a Chinese Laundryman Shaped US Civil Rights (KQED).  The Evolution of the Bail System in America (History). The Volatile History of Flag Burning in the US (History).  The "Founders Museum" from White House and PragerU blurs history, AI-generated fiction (NPR).  Speaking of Founders: How about the one who lost a leg?  (Smithsonian).  And there's no rest for the Madison revisionist: “'If we truly want to look at the birthplace of the United States Constitution, it’s not in Philadelphia, it’s on the second floor of this home,' Montpelier’s Director of Interpretation and Visitor Engagement Kyle Stetz said." (29News).

 Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.