“Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses . . .”
These are among the most world-famous lines of any work of American literature, and whoever hears or reads them identifies them immediately with the most famous statue in America. But that is usually where the familiarity ends. Many serendipities would be needed before these lines would come not just to be identified with the statue but to be inseparable from it in the eyes of the world.
PREVIOUS EPISODES
“The statue would hold out to the whole world the standard of liberty to which Edouard Laboulaye devoted his life’s work.”

“The central purpose of Booker T. Washington’s life and work was to liberate souls from enslavement to ignorance, prejudice, and degrading passions, the kind of slavery that makes us tyrants to those around us in the world we live in.”

WHAT IS THE AMERICAN STORY?
The American Story is a production by Chris Flannery of the Claremont Institute.