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In this episode of the Revolution 250 Podcast, host Robert Allison welcomes historian and author Ryan Cole for a sweeping conversation about memory, gratitude, and the young republic’s most celebrated guest.
Cole, author of Light Horse Harry Lee and his new work The Adieu explores the extraordinary 1824–1825 return tour of Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette. Nearly fifty years after the shots at Lexington and Concord, Lafayette’s journey across all twenty-four states became a rolling national reunion, a living bridge between the Revolutionary generation and a rising America eager to define itself.
Allison and Cole discuss why Lafayette’s visit was more than ceremonial pageantry. It was a reaffirmation of republican ideals, a masterclass in civic memory, and perhaps the most unifying event of the early nineteenth century. From parades and banquets to emotional reunions with aging veterans, the tour rekindled revolutionary spirit at a moment when the nation stood at a crossroads.
As Massachusetts and the nation commemorate the Semiquincentennial, this conversation reminds us that anniversaries are not simply about looking backward. They are about renewing vows. Lafayette’s farewell tour shows how a grateful republic honors its past while quietly shaping its future.
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By Robert Allison4.5
3131 ratings
In this episode of the Revolution 250 Podcast, host Robert Allison welcomes historian and author Ryan Cole for a sweeping conversation about memory, gratitude, and the young republic’s most celebrated guest.
Cole, author of Light Horse Harry Lee and his new work The Adieu explores the extraordinary 1824–1825 return tour of Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette. Nearly fifty years after the shots at Lexington and Concord, Lafayette’s journey across all twenty-four states became a rolling national reunion, a living bridge between the Revolutionary generation and a rising America eager to define itself.
Allison and Cole discuss why Lafayette’s visit was more than ceremonial pageantry. It was a reaffirmation of republican ideals, a masterclass in civic memory, and perhaps the most unifying event of the early nineteenth century. From parades and banquets to emotional reunions with aging veterans, the tour rekindled revolutionary spirit at a moment when the nation stood at a crossroads.
As Massachusetts and the nation commemorate the Semiquincentennial, this conversation reminds us that anniversaries are not simply about looking backward. They are about renewing vows. Lafayette’s farewell tour shows how a grateful republic honors its past while quietly shaping its future.
Tell us what you think! Send us a text message!

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