Blood and Union

Blood and Union Podcast

Unraveling the war that tore America apart — and still shapes us today. Blood and Union is a deep-dive history podcast exploring the American Civil War in all its complexity. Across multiple seasons, we uncover the causes, battles, leaders, and legacies of the conflict that defined a nation. From the compromises of the Founding Fathers to the fields of Gettysburg, from the heroism of the 54th Massachusetts to the failures of Reconstruction, we bring you the real stories — detailed, dramatic, and unflinching. Told in a conversational style with expert insights, Blood and Union combines narrative storytelling, myth-busting, and battle breakdowns to reveal how the war between brothers still echoes through America today.

Episodes

  1. Jan 15

    S2Ep1: Bleeding Kansas: When the Republic Learned to Kill

    In 1854, Congress passed a law meant to quiet the nation. Instead, it taught Americans how to kill each other. This episode opens Season Two by plunging into the chaos unleashed by the Kansas–Nebraska Act — a political experiment that handed the future of slavery to popular vote and discovered, too late, that ballots could be enforced with bullets. Kansas became a battleground before it became a state. Armed Missourians crossed borders to steal elections. Free-State settlers fortified cabins and churches. Law collapsed into intimidation, and democracy was reduced to whoever arrived first with a gun. At the center of the storm stood Stephen A. Douglas, the brilliant and ambitious senator who believed popular sovereignty could defuse the slavery crisis — and instead lit the fuse. From fraudulent elections and the rise of the Border Ruffians to the sack of Lawrence and the breakdown of federal authority, Kansas revealed what the republic looked like when moral questions were treated as procedural inconveniences. And then came John Brown. This episode does not flinch from what happened along Pottawatomie Creek in May 1856. We slow the night down. We name the men who died. We listen to the newspapers, the sermons, and the politicians as they struggled to explain a violence that felt different — deliberate, symbolic, and terrifying. Brown’s actions shocked the nation, hardened the South, unsettled the North, and proved something essential: the Civil War did not begin at Fort Sumter. It began years earlier, in places where law failed and fear ruled. Kansas was not a warning. It was a rehearsal. Season Two begins where compromise ends — and where the war truly starts.   #BleedingKansas #KansasNebraskaAct #JohnBrown #AmericanCivilWar #USHistory #CivilWarHistory #AmericanHistoryPodcast

    52 min
  2. 10/28/2025

    Episode 6: A Fragile Balance: The Compromise of 1850 and the Chains Beneath It

    The Mexican-American War expanded America’s borders — but it also cracked its soul. In 1850, Washington’s elder statesmen tried to stitch the nation back together with words: Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, Daniel Webster… and a rising Mississippi senator named Jefferson Davis. Their Compromise was supposed to save the Union — instead, it shackled it. In this immersive episode, Jeffrey Newman takes you inside the fevered debates of Congress, the fury of the Fugitive Slave Act, and the secret world of the Underground Railroad. Follow the lives of those who defied the law to keep the promise of liberty alive — Harriet Tubman, William Still, Ellen and William Craft, and the countless unnamed souls who built freedom mile by mile in the dark. Then step into the flickering firelight of Civil War-era Halloween — where soldiers carved turnips into lanterns, families turned to séances for comfort, and a haunted nation whispered to its dead. From compromise to conscience, from courtroom to campfire — this is the story of a country bargaining with its own soul. Featured themes: The Compromise of 1850: five laws, one fatal illusion Jefferson Davis’ political ascent and the seeds of secession The brutal enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Act True accounts from the Underground Railroad The two Harriets — Tubman and Beecher Stowe — and the fire they lit Lincoln’s moral awakening as the Whig Party collapses Halloween traditions during the Civil War (A little holiday fun) Next Episode: Polarization and the Death of Moderation — Whigs, Democrats, and the Free Soil Revolt. #BloodAndUnion #CivilWarHistory #AmericanHistory #UndergroundRailroad #HarrietTubman #HarrietBeecherStowe #FugitiveSlaveAct #CompromiseOf1850 #JeffersonDavis #AbrahamLincoln #USHistoryPodcast #HistoryPodcast #AntebellumAmerica #HalloweenHistory #HauntedHistory #TrueHistory #FreedomFighters #Abolitionists #BlackHistory #HistoryLovers

    1h 17m
  3. 10/21/2025

    Episode 5: A Nation Unbound: The Mexican War and the Seeds of Division

    The Mexican-American War made America an empire — and fractured its soul. In this sweeping chapter of Blood and Union, host Jeffrey Newman traces the nation’s march from Texas independence through the fires of Manifest Destiny to the uneasy peace of the Compromise of 1850. It was a war born of ambition and pride — waged by men who believed God had given them the continent, and paid for by those left beneath its shadow. From Polk’s provocation and Santa Anna’s defiance, to the cries of conscience in Congress and the haunting words of the Wilmot Proviso, this episode reveals how victory abroad sowed the seeds of disunion at home. Episode Highlights: The forgotten Mexican perspective — and why Mexico never recognized Texas independence President Polk’s deliberate march to war and the manipulation of “American blood on American soil” The human cost of Manifest Destiny: soldiers, settlers, and the San Patricio Battalion The Wilmot Proviso and the birth of America’s sectional divide The Compromise of 1850 and the fragile peace that could not hold The nation’s borders were secure — but its conscience was not. The next battle would be fought not in deserts or valleys, but in the streets of Northern cities, where the law would demand that free men become slave catchers.   #BloodAndUnion #AmericanHistory #MexicanAmericanWar #ManifestDestiny #WilmotProviso #CompromiseOf1850 #TexasIndependence #SantaAnna #JamesKPolk #CivilWarOrigins #AntebellumAmerica #HistoryPodcast #TrueHistory #EmpireAndDivision

    44 min
  4. 09/29/2025

    Episode 2: The Cotton Kingdom

    Episode 2 – King Cotton & the Triumvirate: Power, Politics, and Division In the wake of the War of 1812, America entered a new era — one defined by cotton, conflict, and compromise. Eli Whitney’s cotton gin revolutionized the economy, but instead of easing labor, it deepened the chains of slavery and fueled the rise of the Cotton Kingdom. In this episode of Blood and Union, host Jeffrey Newman unpacks: How the War of 1812 disrupted trade and ignited a domestic textile boom. The mechanics and impact of the cotton gin, and why it expanded slavery instead of reducing it. The rise of John C. Calhoun, from nationalist to slavery’s most fervent defender. The emergence of the Great Triumvirate — Calhoun, Henry Clay, and Daniel Webster — three men whose rival visions defined the antebellum era. The Missouri Compromise (1820), Tariff of Abominations (1828), and Nullification Crisis (1832–33) — and how each deepened sectional divides. The paradox of federal vs. state power, the Trail of Tears, and the relentless hunger for cotton lands. This is the story of how cotton reshaped America’s economy and politics, and how three towering statesmen set the stage for the battles to come. 👉 For extended study notes, artifact references, and fact vs. fiction breakdowns, visit the blog: https://bloodandunion.podbean.com/ Hashtags: #BloodAndUnion #CivilWarHistory #KingCotton #JohnCalhoun #HenryClay #DanielWebster #Antebellum #HistoryPodcast #AmericanHistory #NullificationCrisis #MissouriCompromise

    48 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Unraveling the war that tore America apart — and still shapes us today. Blood and Union is a deep-dive history podcast exploring the American Civil War in all its complexity. Across multiple seasons, we uncover the causes, battles, leaders, and legacies of the conflict that defined a nation. From the compromises of the Founding Fathers to the fields of Gettysburg, from the heroism of the 54th Massachusetts to the failures of Reconstruction, we bring you the real stories — detailed, dramatic, and unflinching. Told in a conversational style with expert insights, Blood and Union combines narrative storytelling, myth-busting, and battle breakdowns to reveal how the war between brothers still echoes through America today.