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Feb. 26, 2026, 4:33 p.m.

As America turns 250, historian Joseph Ellis examines the founders’ promise and their failures

NOTE: If you are short on time, watch the video and complete this See, Think, Wonder activity: What did you notice? What did the story make you think about? What would you want to learn more about?

SUMMARY

With a 250th birthday in sight, we wanted to ask Americans what it means to be an American and reflect on what the founders built, who they left out and what in that 250-year history has been left unresolved. Judy Woodruff went to Vermont, a state whose motto is "Freedom and Unity," for her series, America at a Crossroads. She spoke with local Vermonters as well as Pulitzer Prize-winning author and historian Joseph Ellis.

View the transcript of the story.

News alternative: Check out recent segments from the News Hour, and choose the story you’re most interested in watching. You can make a Google doc copy of discussion questions that work for any of the stories here.

Credit: PBS News Hour screenshot: America at a Crossroads America 250 series

WARM-UP QUESTIONS

  1. Who is Joseph Ellis, and what is his background?
  2. Where was the segment filmed?
  3. How do residents at the diner feel about the state of the country?
  4. Why does Ellis argue slavery and treatment of Native Americans were America's two "tragic contradictions"?
  5. What two primary source documents does Ellis advise Americans read at the close of the interview? What does he say the founders promised America in the Constitution?

ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS

  • Why do you think Joseph Ellis recommends Americans read the Declaration of Independence and Thomas Paine's "Common Sense" in order understand this founding period in U.S. history?
  • Vermont resident Scott MacDonald said, "We have had parts of our history that are shameful, of course, and every country has. It's what we do about it now that matters." How do you think slavery and the treatment of Native Americans continues to affect America? What do you think needs to be done to heal these wounds?
  • What does it mean to be an American or live in America today?

Media literacy: Why do you think News Hour producers chose to interview local Vermonters at a diner and not just Ellis?

WHAT STUDENTS CAN DO

Declaration of Independence, The National Archives

With a friend, family member or neighbor discuss the following quotes by Joseph Ellis from the video and answer the accompanying questions.

  • "Read the Declaration," Ellis advises at the end of the interview. "It's only two pages' long. You can pull it up on your cell phone, OK?" Read this transcription of the Declaration of Independence from the National Archives and be sure to look the original document itself.

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Illustrations by Annamaria Ward