The Early American Republic 1783-1796
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Dive into the turbulent birth of the United States in this episode exploring the Early Republic, as we trace how a fragile new nation of three million people—“one‑sixth of whom were enslaved”—struggled to govern itself after 1783, wrestling with deep social divisions, crushing war debts, interstate rivalries and the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation. We unpack the crises that pushed Americans toward reform, from Britain’s refusal to abandon frontier forts to Spain’s closure of the Mississippi, from economic collapse and runaway inflation to the eruption of Shays’ Rebellion in 1786–87, when “several hundred men” marched on the federal arsenal at Springfield. The episode follows the road to the 1787 Philadelphia Convention, the creation of a new Constitution balancing federal and state power, and the fierce ratification battle between Federalists and Anti‑Federalists, before turning to the challenges of launching the first government in 1789 under George Washington, the adoption of the Bill of Rights in 1791, and the political storm that made finding his successor in 1796 such a national dilemma.