Lucy Worsley Investigates: The American Revolution (BBC2) Rating:

History News

Lucy Worsley Investigates: The American Revolution (BBC2) Rating:
Lucy WorsleyAmerican RevolutionBreakup

Lucy Worsley did not explain what the locals thought about Benjamin Franklin's air baths or his image on the U.S. $100 bill. She did mention that the American Revolution involved clashes, demonstrations, massacres, and 342 chests of tea. She thought the revolution was similar to a breakup between lovers. Lively re-enactments provided a taste of the events.

Lucy Worsley Investigates: The American Revolution Rating: Every morning when he lived in London, the great American thinker and politician Benjamin Franklin would throw open the shutters of his upstairs windows and take an 'air bath' — stark naked.

Breathing in the pungent odours of Craven Street, between the Strand and the Thames, he let the bracing city breezes fumigate his body. If that's how he cleansed himself, lord only knows what he smelled like otherwise. What the locals thought about these ablutions, Lucy Worsley didn't say, as she investigated the history of The American Revolution.

She did tell us Franklin's image still appears on the U.S. $100 bill, but didn't mention that he was one of 17 children, and the youngest son. Probably a good thing: the cast of this whistle-stop history was already too numerous to count. Romantic that she is, Prof Lucy repeatedly compared the American Revolution to a break-up between lovers.

She must have seen some pretty dramatic separations in her time, because this one involved battles, riots, massacres and 342 chests of tea, dumped into Boston Harbour. Lucy Worsley in her investigations of The American Revolution When the revolutionaries tore down a statue of George III and beheaded it, the metal was melted down and turned into musketballs. As divorces go, this one was acrimonious.

Lively re-enactments gave us a flavour of the events, though they were all mime with no dialogue. Lucy, who rarely dresses up any more, took no part in them. She did try a pot of mulberry tea, which patriotic Americans drank instead of the English brew.

'I can tell you it's pretty disgusting,' she grimaced. 'Eughh! Seaweed!

' She was wearing her trademark scarlet, with dresses and jumpers to match her lipstick and the British redcoats. Her colour scheme emphasised the storytelling: this account is very much from a UK viewpoint, with plenty of sympathy for King George and an underlying theme that hinted the world might have been a better place if the United States had remained under our government. Even some of the Founding Fathers thought so.

Lucy unearthed an early draft of the Declaration of Independence, handwritten by Thomas Jefferson, which lamented, 'We might have been a free and a great people together.

' That line was taken out of the final wording, which doesn't make it any the less true. So far, George Washington hasn't entered the picture. Most American retellings of the revolution paint him as a saint, but I'm hoping this version, with its pro-British perspective, will highlight his character flaws.

According to the great U.S. newspaper columnist Bill Nye, writing 150 years ago, Washington might not have been able to tell a lie but everything else about his language was furious, foul and fulminating. The future President, Bill said, 'could reproach his subordinates in a way to make the ground crack open and break up the ice in the Delaware river'. Really, it's a good job those re-enactments are silent.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

DailyMail /  🏆 86. in US

Lucy Worsley American Revolution Breakup George III Cast Re-Enactments Tea United States British

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

LUCY WORSLEY INVESTIGATES: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONLUCY WORSLEY INVESTIGATES: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONStream now with KPBS+ / Watch Mondays, May 18 and 25, 2026 at 10 p.m. on KPBS TV. Lucy Worsley investigates the 18th century split between Britain and its 13 North American colonies.
Read more »

The Revolution of Food Culture: Edna Lewis's 'The Taste of Country Cooking' Transforms American CuisineThe Revolution of Food Culture: Edna Lewis's 'The Taste of Country Cooking' Transforms American CuisineEdna Lewis's 'The Taste of Country Cooking' revolutionized food culture in America by tying food to the seasons and the land, a view that contrasted with the perception of Southern food as over-salty and over-fatty. Her memoir of cooking and her community life provided a blueprint based on the cycles of Black farming, years before farm-to-table became a trend in America. Edna Lewis, who grew up in Freetown, a farming community established by former slaves in central Virginia, passed away in 2006 but left a lasting impact on American cooking.
Read more »

Lucy Dacus, Bar Italia, and the Artists Reinventing Indie Rock for a New GenerationLucy Dacus, Bar Italia, and the Artists Reinventing Indie Rock for a New GenerationIn a landscape flooded with AI-driven sameness, these musicians prove that experimentation—and imperfection—can still cut through the noise.
Read more »

Lucy Hale Film ‘Vision Board’ Pre-Sells To Key Markets: Cannes MarketLucy Hale Film ‘Vision Board’ Pre-Sells To Key Markets: Cannes MarketPretty Little Liars and Truth Or Dare star Hale is starring in romantic-fantasy film Vision Board.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-05-21 05:41:16