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A History of the United States in 100 Objects

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A History of the United States in 100 Objects

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Wherever you are, stop for a moment and take a look around you.

At all times, you are surrounded by objects that at first glance seem meaningless, but if

you really think about them, they tell stories.

A boarding pass that's still folded in your pocket.

The book on the shelf that you were assigned in freshman seminar only read half of but you

still held on to for 20 years.

The picture of your kids at the beach.

Or even the paperclip that once fastened some important papers but for the life of you,

you can't remember which ones.

Gather enough of these objects and they begin to form a biography of who you are through

things, the precious keepsakes, the clutter on your nightstand.

Even the stuff you'll eventually throw away.

Now stay with me here.

Imagine you are the United States of America and it's your 250th birthday.

What objects would tell your history?

Of course there's the original Declaration of Independence and Lincoln's top hat and

I don't know, like a cannon from Fort Sumter.

All worthy and fascinated objects to be sure, but there is another story to be told using

the objects that you don't see on sweaty field trips to museums.

The equivalent of the ticket stubs and the favorite knickknacks and the paperclips.

Like a bootleg band t-shirt that tells the history of American punk rock, we're a little

blue book that enslaved people transformed into a tool of liberation.

Or a one inch screw that shows how America built a hidden industrial empire.

The screw thread is a simple device but it ties together the whole mechanical skeleton

of our civilization, which on the one hand seems over a blend, but you're like, is it wrong?

I don't know that it's wrong.

It's not wrong, my guy.

From 99% of Israel and BBC studios, I'm Roman Mars and this is a history of the United

States and 100 objects.

As the country marks its semi-Gwin centennial, a word I will never say again, we're going

to collect objects from across American history, 100 objects to be exact.

Picture a Western where they're robbing a train and there's a safe on one of the cars

of the railroad train.

This is the icon of his presidency.

This is it.

This is the Billy Posson.

To tell the story of who we are and where we've been.

Remember, this is before the invention of the electric bulb, so a night fell.

It was a night.

Yes.

We're going to talk to historians and journalists and regular folks who are obsessed

with objects beyond the official record.

Like, forgotten, nobody's, they might have well been called.

Objects that tell a history as sprawling and contradictory as America itself.

The Blueback Speller is something that became a particularly prized possession because

it meant that you might not be free in body, but you could be free in mind.

100 objects, 100 stories, a new history of the US hiding in plain sight.

A history of the United States in 100 objects, a brand new show from the BBC in 99%

invisible.

We're going to publish a new episode every Friday in the 99% invisible feed, which

you can find wherever you get your podcasts.