America's Founding Generation

We honor the men and women of America’s founding generation who broke barriers and shaped the early republic by stepping into roles never before held. From the first signers of the Declaration of Independence and Constitution to the first voices calling for liberty, equality, and expanded rights, their bold service turned individual acts of courage into national progress. Their legacies remind us that active participation and representation were essential to creating a new democracy—and remain vital to sustaining it today.

Crispus Attucks: The First to Fall for American Liberty

In the story of America’s founding, one man’s courage on a cold March night in Boston became a ...
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Marquis de Lafayette: The Hero of Two Revolutions

Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, was born on September 6, 1757, in the ...
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Haym Salomon: The Financier Who Helped Pay for American Independence

Haym Salomon’s story begins far from the battlefields of the American Revolution in Leszno, Poland, around 1740. He ...
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Abigail Adams: The Conscience of a Revolution

Abigail Adams by Gilbert Stuart Abigail Adams stands as one of the most influential women of America’s founding ...
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Mercy Otis Warren: The Conscience of the American Revolution

Mercy Otis was born on September 14, 1728, in Barnstable, Massachusetts, into one of the colony’s most politically ...
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Benjamin Harrison: The Patriarch of a Founding Dynasty

Benjamin Harrison of Virginia was a man whose life intertwined privilege, political conviction, and a steadfast dedication to ...
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Gouverneur Morris: The Revolutionary’s Pen and the Nation’s Architect

Gouverneur Morris is often celebrated as the man who physically wrote the final draft of the United States ...
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John Quincy Adams: Statesman, President, and Defender of Principle

John Quincy Adams was more than just America’s sixth president. He was a lifelong public servant, a master ...
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Portrait of George Washington, Gilbert Stuart, 1803

George Washington Takes Command: July 3, 1775 — The Founding of the Continental Army

On July 3, 1775, George Washington mounted his horse and rode into Cambridge, Massachusetts, to take command of ...
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John Hull and the First American Mint: A Bold Step Toward Colonial Self-Reliance

In June of 1652, the Massachusetts Bay Colony took an extraordinary step that would shape the course of ...
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The Boston Tea Party: A Story of Resistance, Revolution, and Legacy

On a chilly December night in 1773, Boston Harbor shimmered under the faint light of a waxing moon. ...
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American Patriot, Nathan Hale

Nathan Hale, a young American schoolteacher turned patriot spy, remains a poignant symbol of sacrifice, bravery, and devotion ...
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