Dad and Me Love History

By: Paul Letters - WW2 novelist broadcaster history teacher; James Letters -
  • Summary

  • Get your kid away from screens for a fun fifteen-minutes, answering the big questions in history! Fun for parents too! Subscribe for free on iTunes, Spotify, YouTube and wherever else you get podcasts! Join us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and our webpage. Graphics by Molly Austin of mollyavalon.com Instrumental music by Kevin Macleod of incompetech.com
    Paul and James Letters 2018
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Episodes
  • 61: Nazi Germany: the beginning, middle & end of the Third Reich
    Dec 13 2024

    We look at the rise of the Nazis and how they created and ruled what they called Germany’s “Third Reich”.

    When Hitler became ‘Chancellor’ - that means prime minister - Germany was still a democracy. How did Hitler and the Nazis turn a country with elections and a variety of political parties (groups) into a dictatorship where the Nazi party had eliminated all other groups, giving themselves total power?

    There are lots of photos from our trip to Germany on https://www.dadandmelovehistory.com/

    WARNING regarding young children: towards the end, we do discuss the Holocaust.

    After the end theme music you’ll find these questions, followed by outtakes:

    1. What does the German word “Reich” mean?

    2. In the summer of 1914 in Munich, what news was announced that Hitler liked?

    3. Before the Nazis’ 1923 attempt to take over Germany, Hitler was not well-known. When the Nazis tried to begin a revolution in 1923 in Munich to take over Germany, why do you think they failed?

    4. What do you think Hitler and the Nazis gained from this failed revolution of 1923?

    5. The people of Germany later voted for Hitler and the Nazi Party more than for any other party. When did Hitler become ‘Chancellor’ (Prime Minister) of Germany?

    6. What was ‘Dachau’ and why do you think the Nazis wanted it to be built so soon after the Nazis took over Germany?

    7. What were the Nuremberg Trials and who was Rudolf Hess?

    8. Why were these trials important?

    Here’s our website, where you'll find photos, info about each episode and links to our social media: dadandmelovehistory.com.

    We also strongly recommend the family-friendly History Detective podcast, as advertised in our pod. Check out historydetectivepodcast.com!

    For mature history lovers: read industry reviews of Dad’s World War II novels, A Chance Kill and The Slightest Chance, at paulletters.com. Available as e-books, as well as in paperback. Dad’s first wartime novel, A Chance Kill, is a love-story/thriller based on real events in Poland, Paris, London and Prague. The Slightest Chance follows the remarkable true story of the only escape from Japanese imprisonment by a Western woman during World War II.

    Please rate and review us wherever you get podcasts. And share our podcast on social media and recommend it to friends – that's how we'll keep going. We will bring you episodes throughout the year, so stay subscribed on your podcast app!

    Podcast cover art by Molly Austin

    All instrumental music is from https://filmmusic.io and composed by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

    Sound effects are used under RemArc Licence. Copyright 2024 © BBC

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    20 mins
  • 60: Why is the Statue of Liberty so important?
    Apr 27 2024

    A beacon of hope, the Statue of Liberty has welcomed millions of immigrants to the United States and to a new life. The statue overlooks New York harbour, close to Ellis Island immigration centre: if the USA is a land of immigrants, Ellis Island is where those immigrants landed.

    Built by France for the USA, there was some debate about which city the statue should be placed in. Then there was how to pay for a pedestal large enough to hold Liberty.

    We are grateful to Suzanne Mannion, Director of Public Affairs at the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, for arranging our visit, and to our interviewee, Jonathan da Silva, Assistant Manager of the American Family Immigration History Centre on Ellis Island.

    After the end theme music you’ll find these questions, followed by outtakes and an extra recording we made in the Statue of Liberty Museum:

    1. Where was the first federal immigration centre for the USA?

    2. What was the ‘kissing post’?

    3. Why do you think immigrants would be happy to see the Statue of Liberty when their ship arrived in New York?

    4. Who paid for the pedestal - the base platform - that the Statue of Liberty would be built on?

    5. Can you name any other city that requested that the Statue of Liberty be placed their area?

    6. What do the seven rays or spikes on the Statue’s crown represent?

    Here’s our website, where you'll find photos, info about each episode and links to our social media: https://www.dadandmelovehistory.com/ - here, you can also listen to episodes.

    For mature history lovers: read industry reviews of Dad’s World War II novels, A Chance Kill and The Slightest Chance, at paulletters.com. Available as e-books, as well as in paperback. Dad’s first wartime novel, A Chance Kill, is a love-story/thriller based on real events in Poland, Paris, London and Prague. The Slightest Chance follows the remarkable true story of the only escape from Japanese imprisonment by a Western woman during World War II.

    Please rate and review us wherever you get podcasts. And share our podcast on social media and recommend it to friends – that's how we'll keep going. We will bring you episodes throughout the year, so stay subscribed on your podcast app!

    Podcast cover art by Molly Austin

    All instrumental music is from https://filmmusic.io and composed by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

    Sound effects are used under RemArc Licence. Copyright 2024 © BBC

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    18 mins
  • 59: The secret missions that made D-Day possible
    Dec 15 2023

    We investigate the special operations that occurred ahead of the D-Day landings of over 130,000 Allied troops on the Nazi-controlled beaches of northern France 

    We look at the role of special troops who parachuted into Nazi-occupied France ahead of the D-Day beach landings. With help from a very special expert guest, we focus on a mission for US Army Rangers at a headland near the beaches, called Pointe du Hoc. 

    After the end theme music you’ll find these questions, followed by the outtakes:

    1. Which Allied countries took part in the D-Day landings?

    2. What was this operation called? 

    3. Why did Allied special forces parachute into France before the D-Day beach landings?

    4. Why was it important to disrupt railway lines and German communication centres?

    5. Why was Pointe du Hoc an important piece of land?

    6. What challenges did the US Rangers face?

    Our website, where you'll find photos, info about each episode and links to our social media, is https://www.dadandmelovehistory.com/ - where you can also listen to episodes.

    For mature history lovers: read industry reviews of Dad’s World War II novels, A Chance Kill and The Slightest Chance, at paulletters.com. Available as e-books, as well as in paperback. Dad’s first wartime novel, A Chance Kill, is a love-story/thriller based on real events in Poland, Paris, London and Prague. The Slightest Chance follows the remarkable true story of the only escape from Japanese imprisonment by a Western woman during World War II.

    Please rate and review us wherever you get podcasts. And share our podcast on social media and recommend it to friends – that's how we'll keep going. We will bring you episodes throughout the year, so stay subscribed on your podcast app!

    Podcast cover art by Molly Austin

    All instrumental music is from https://filmmusic.io and composed by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

    Sound effects are used under RemArc Licence. Copyright 2023 © BBC

    Show More Show Less
    31 mins

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