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Empowering Leadership


Sep 11, 2023

Within the last few generations, American historians have peeled back the layers on the traditional teachings of the founding of the US to more prominently include the role of slavery, particularly by the founding fathers. A focus on telling the “whole truth” seeks not to dismiss the accomplishments of founders like James Madison and Thomas Jefferson, but instead paint a more complete picture. That includes the role of indentured servitude that allowed these leaders the ability to devote their lives towards studying great thinkers and writing the documents that would become the founding of America.

Elizabeth Chew has held leadership and curatorial positions at two of the most famous landmarks of this era, Monticello and Montpelier. Elizabeth joins the Empowering Leadership podcast and host Doug McVadon for a discussion on reframing how we view the founding fathers to include the factors that made their important contributions to the founding of the US possible. Elizabeth, who curated the exhibition “The Mere Distinction of Color,” talks about the contributions of the “invisible founders” who facilitated tobacco production and the home lifestyle work that has historically gone uncredited.

Connect with Elizabeth on LinkedIn. Visit James Madison’s Montpelier online at montpelier.org.