Tags

American Institutions

Showing 1 - 17 of 17 results
In the news

For America250, celebrate Michigan too

Feb 18, 2026 The Michigan Daily
After 2025 became 2026 and I had watched the ball drop in Times Square, I saw a short clip of the projections on the Washington Monument celebrating the beginning of America’s 250th anniversary. Semiquincentennial festivities will surely be at their ...
In the news

U-M's U.S. at 250 program launches grant initiative

Oct 23, 2025 The Record
July 4, 2026, will mark the 250th anniversary of U.S. democracy. To mark this milestone, the Initiative for Democracy and Civic Engagement, the William L. Clements Library, and the Arts Initiative have joined forces to create U-M’s U.S. at 250 progra...

Nerd Night at LIVE

Jul 9, 2026, 7:00-9:00 pm EDT
LIVE Nightclub
Check out American history with Landon Myers for Unimaginable Election Shenanigans: Voting in Early America. While modern elections are the most secure in our history, voting in early America was rife with election fraud. We'll dive into the history of voting in the United States in the 19th century, from stuffed ballot boxes, counterfeit ballots, and the tools developed to combat fraud. Landon is the Program Manager for the Initiative for Democracy & Civic Empowerment at the University of Michigan. He is fascinated by the mechanics of elections and has been collecting antique voting machines, ballot boxes, and other election materials for more than five years.

Freedom Plane National Tour: Documents That Forged a Nation

Jul 9-26, 2026, All Day
Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation
Inspired by the Bicentennial Freedom Train, the Freedom Plane National Tour will make original documents fundamental to America's founding accessible to Americans across the country as part of the commemoration of America's 250th anniversary.

The Original Debates over Constitutional Interpretation

Jun 25, 2026, 6:30-8:00 pm EDT
The Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
Today, debate rages over how to interpret the United States Constitution, especially what role history should play in that practice. When the generation that adopted the Constitution in the late eighteenth century first interpreted the document, what defined their debates? How do those debates compare to the ones structuring American constitutional law today? Join author and professor Jonathan Gienapp for a lecture exploring how to read the Constitution through lenses past and present and reflecting on what the creators can teach us about the Constitution today. A book signing and dessert reception will follow the program.
Watch live from this page

We Shall Defend: Michigan Governors Who Served in the Armed Forces

Jun 23, 2026, 7:00-8:00 pm EDT
Heritage Hall Michigan State Capitol Building
Join the Michigan State Capitol Education & History Department throughout 2026 as we commemorate our nation's 250th anniversary. Our monthly program series, Rise & Progress, will explore a range of America 250 themes and examine how our Capitol—and the community of people connected to it—fit within the larger American story.

"1776" by Ann Arbor Civic Theatre

Jun 11-14, 2026, All Day
Arthur Miller Theatre
1776Music and lyrics by Sherman Edwards, book by Peter Stone Directed by David Kiley The Ann Arbor Civic Theatre is presenting the musical 1776 to mark the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States.

Gerald Ford and an Old Sentence that Feels Unexpectedly Modern

Apr 28, 2026, 6:00-7:00 pm EDT
Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library Ann Arbor, MI
Gerald Ford Jr. grew up in a region of the nation heavily shaped by the Northwest Ordinance of 1787. Ford Presidential Foundation Executive Director Gleaves Whitney will unpack the significance of this jewel among America's forgotten founding documents and discuss its impact on the civic and political culture in which our 38th President worked.

Diverse Decor: Comparing the Artwork of Elijah Myers' Three Capitols

Apr 21, 2026, 7:00-8:00 pm EDT
Heritage Hall MI State Capitol Building
Join the Michigan State Capitol Education & History Department throughout 2026 as we commemorate our nation's 250th anniversary. Our monthly program series, Rise & Progress, will explore a range of America 250 themes and examine how our Capitol—and the community of people connected to it—fit within the larger American story.