00:22Save them tears, the lords watching over us, ain't nobody gonna be busting through them
00:29the front doors any time soon. And our army's gonna stop the British right in their tracks.
00:36Bet on it.
00:37Well said, Freeman.
00:50You planning on cutting the cake with that Mrs. Madison?
00:53Fake? No. The English? Perhaps.
01:03Chocolate sponge would be a whole lot easier to clean off that blade.
01:14The guests will be arriving in less than two hours. Please ensure there is enough cider and wine. The entire
01:22cabinet has been invited and some of them could drink a tavern dry.
01:27Mrs. Madison, are you sure the cabinet's gonna come? Seems to me they might be too busy, what with the
01:35redcoats on our doorstep.
01:36Of course they'll come. It is our duty to keep up appearances. Reassure the people of Washington that our army
01:43has everything under control.
01:57The blade itself incites the deeds of violence. The Odyssey. Homer. If we survive this, we got some reading to
02:13do.
02:21In 1814, when the British are moving north towards Washington DC, the Americans decide to resist them at Bladensburg, which
02:33is east of Washington. And the whole thing is a mess.
02:42Water.
02:46Water.
02:49Water.
02:50Okay, son.
02:51Yeah, careful, careful.
02:52Madison is there. He's with a couple of aides. They're very worried about his safety.
02:59This was an active battlefield. Shots were being fired.
03:04President Madison, you shouldn't be here. The English have broken through.
03:11Sir.
03:12I'll go with you, son. I'll go with you.
03:17James Madison stays on the battlefield right up until it's clear that the battle is lost and he needs to
03:22leave or else he could be captured along with other US forces.
03:29But they called it the Bladensburg races because it was in battle as much as a race away.
03:33Thank you, myph
04:02Hey!
04:03What time is it?
04:06Quarter past four, Mrs. Madison.
04:10Everyone is late.
04:21They've gone.
04:28All of them.
04:32How could they?
04:35Cowards!
04:36At one point, Dolly looks out and sees that the militia have left.
04:42The White House was essentially left wide open, unguarded, and vulnerable.
04:49And here's Dolly, still inside, wondering what to do.
04:53Mrs. Madison, do you think maybe we should collect your belongings and get you somewhere safe?
05:02I won't be going anywhere, not until I hear from the president himself.
05:10You heard, Mrs. Madison.
05:12We're staying.
05:22Bladesburg is actually quite close to the district of Columbia.
05:28Cannon fire could be heard rumbling in the distance.
05:49Will I be a guest?
05:53Better be safe than sorry.
05:57Freeman, grab the sword and join me.
05:59I'm sorry.
06:04I'm sorry.
06:11I'm sorry.
06:19I'm sorry.
06:22President Trump is here.
06:22I'm sorry.
06:26I'm sorry.
06:37Prime Ministerŕ¸ŕ¸ has ordered a complete retreat from Washington.
06:41and British troops are expected to be here in a matter of hours.
06:50Any word of the President?
06:56Go and return to General Armstrong.
06:59Tell him our prayers are with him.
07:04Time to go, Mrs. Madison?
07:07Yes, John.
07:09Time to go.
07:12First, there are a few things we must do.
07:22Time to scare to touch it.
07:24Don't be a coward. It's only a copy.
07:27Well, you do it then.
07:28Uh-uh. That there's a man's job.
07:36Don't drop it.
07:38Dolly needs to flee.
07:40She's told she should flee.
07:42But she thinks about what should I save?
07:45What should I preserve from the White House?
07:49Dolly Madison knows that the British are going to destroy anything they can find.
07:53They're going to desecrate any symbol of America and its independence.
07:58We hold these troops to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, and that they are endowed by
08:07their creator with certain unalienable rights.
08:12It's time to go, John.
08:15I know.
08:17That's the last of the things Mrs. Madison asked me to fetch.
08:20I should go find her.
08:23Do you think the English is going to kill us?
08:25Kill us?
08:27Not a chance.
08:28We're slaves.
08:30We're more valuable than all the silverware in this building.
08:40Damn you, Jemmy.
08:42Where are you?
08:44Where are you?
09:02Hey, men.
09:04Ain't nothing a man wouldn't do when he survived being shot at.
09:07Please, men.
09:08My fiancee's here, too.
09:13All right.
09:16But first, there's one more thing we need to pack.
09:27Are you sure?
09:30Why do men always have to overcompensate?
09:41These are all going to get killed for a president that, that years ago.
09:44Freeman?
09:45Nothing, ma'am.
09:46Just admiring Mr. Washington is all.
09:49Well, stop admiring it and start packing it up.
09:57She's worried that if the British occupy the White House, that they'll deface the painting of George Washington.
10:05And that would be too embarrassing for the United States.
10:10But don't just stand there.
10:14Drop it to the floor and cut it from the frame.
10:40Enjoy this moment.
10:42Might be the only time a black man gets to stick a knife in the president and not get hung
10:45for it.
11:21That's everything, Mrs. Madison.
11:23Something has happened to him?
11:25It must have he'd have been here.
11:29I know you want to wait, man, but I have to tell you, unless you come now, I'll be forced
11:33to pick you up myself and suffer the consequences later.
11:38If I were a man, I'd post a can on every window of the White House and fight to the
11:41bitter end.
11:42I know you would.
11:44I know you would.
11:44Now, let's get going.
11:54She really does stay longer than she probably should have.
11:57She could have been captured as a prisoner of war and paraded through the streets of London.
12:08She finally leaves and just in the nick of time.
12:16Dolly.
12:31Dolly.
12:33Dolly.
12:36Dolly.
12:39Anyone?
12:40Anyone?
12:49What the hell is going on here?
12:51Why are you going on here?
12:52Go.
13:27By the time James Madison gets back to the White House, Dolly has already left.
13:31And there will be looters who start raiding the White House for any goods that they can find.
13:39Eventually, Madison leaves. He goes to a town in Maryland called Brookville.
13:46And once the British pass Bladensburg, that is effectively the final resistance the British meet.
14:03The British enter the White House and the first thing they do is have a party. Dolly's left them with
14:08dinner.
14:10They sit down. It's the famous last dinner party where they all sit around.
14:14They wonder if the food's been poisoned, but they drink and eat anyway.
14:19And it was only then, after enjoying themselves, that they decided to set fire to the White House.
14:26Put that food down! The General has ordered us to torch the place. Now!
14:41For King George!
14:53Let's go!
15:05They start burning public buildings and really terrorize Washington for about 24 hours.
15:14It was the burning of the White House itself that was really the symbol of the entire war.
15:20The White House, symbol of the nation, torched by an invading army.
15:24There you go.
16:04Please be here, please be here.
16:25James Madison, you are a fool, a dumb fool.
16:29You swore you would go nowhere near the fighting.
16:32Didn't that tell you to leave the presidential house before the British arrived?
16:36You did.
16:37I traded my mind.
16:43That doesn't sound good.
16:45Cannons.
16:47No, it's a storm.
16:50Hopefully it will slow the British down.
16:54Let's hunker here till the passes.
16:58The British are holding Washington, but one thing that encourages them to leave is a hurricane the following day.
17:06The hellacious storm rain winds.
17:10They called it the storm that saved Washington because it helped put out all the fires.
17:15And to some, it was as if there had been divine intervention to spare America.
17:20And the rain.
17:38It's just a few teeth.
17:38The gun is being allowed for them.
17:39It's the gun.
17:40That's not a big deal.
17:40It's not a big deal.
17:41It's not a big deal.
17:41It's a big deal.
17:49It's the best that needs to be seen.
17:49It's the best that needs to be seen.
17:49I'm the best to find your book door.
17:50Like we only have any errors in the thing to find out.
17:53It appears the British are less than considerate guests.
17:59They returned to the White House about three days later to a very different city.
18:04The Capitol had been destroyed, numerous other federal buildings had also been torched,
18:10and although the shell of the White House remained, it was uninhabitable.
18:16They even took President Washington's portrayal.
18:20Bastards.
18:21Oh, no. That was me.
18:26I still had somewhere safe.
18:29The British don't know how lucky they are that you left before they arrived.
18:33Well, I mean, if that's what you did to Washington, then...
18:41You can imagine what's going on through James Madison's mind at the time.
18:44The symbolism of the Capitol falling under James Madison's watch
18:49would have been just utterly devastating.
18:52He was jeered in the press.
18:55Jeered, in fact, in the streets.
18:59Tell me truthfully, Jimmy.
19:03Do you think the Senate really means us to abandon Washington forever?
19:08You're scared.
19:12Fools.
19:13After the attack on Washington, D.C., a lot of people believe now that Washington lay too exposed.
19:19There was talk about relocating the nation's capital much further inland.
19:24The city of Cincinnati in Ohio was discussed.
19:29There was a time when we first arrived in Washington, and I thought,
19:36surely this can't be the new home of our great nation.
19:40What?
19:41A great big pile of bricks dropped onto a swamp.
19:47Honestly, James, I would have hitched up my skirt and run all the way back to Montpelier
19:52if someone had told me there was no shame in it.
19:56But now,
19:59this building,
20:02the Capitol,
20:04are symbols of everything we're trying to build.
20:10The British tried to destroy it, but here we are.
20:14Still standing.
20:17If we abandon Washington now,
20:20they will have won.
20:23Then we must fight for it, my dear.
20:36When we first arrived in Washington,
20:38many years ago,
20:40it's safe to say that we were surprised.
20:43I lost a good pair of shoes,
20:45helping to push my carriage across the stream on the outskirts of town,
20:48and a couple of men threw a bottle at my head
20:50from the steps of the local tavern as we finally arrived.
20:53It's too bad they missed.
20:54Oh.
20:56And then we saw
20:58the President's house.
21:00Under John Adams,
21:01the water closet was outside,
21:03the steps were half built,
21:04and I do believe that
21:05Mrs. Adams was forced to hang the washing
21:07from the East Room.
21:11Jefferson finished the stairs
21:12and got some fancy privies built inside the house.
21:16And when
21:17my wife and I
21:19moved
21:19to the President's house,
21:22Valley made it into the most beautiful home in America,
21:26with some of the best parties, too.
21:29But then the
21:31British paid us a visit
21:32and burned it all down to the ground.
21:35If the Presidential Palace were a dog,
21:37you'd put it down.
21:38The Senate Building, too.
21:41Now,
21:42we know that most of you think that that is the right thing to do.
21:48Leave Washington
21:49and return government
21:52and this residence to Philadelphia.
21:54But that
21:55is not a vision
21:56I subscribe to.
21:58And neither
21:59does he.
22:10George Washington
22:12united this nation
22:14and defeated
22:15the British.
22:17It was his will
22:19that this new nation
22:20have its capital here
22:22and that the President should live
22:24right here.
22:26Now, I ask you,
22:28would Washington run
22:30with his tail
22:31between his legs
22:33back to Philadelphia?
22:34No.
22:37My husband and I
22:39ask that you back
22:41new plans
22:42to rebuild this city
22:43so it becomes
22:45even greater.
22:47A shining beacon
22:49that no other nation
22:50can ever destroy.
22:52And that beautiful
22:54White House
22:56will be the beaten
22:57heart
22:58of our nation
23:00a home
23:04for all of us
23:07forever.
23:10Forever!
23:20Do you really think this place can be rebuilt, Jimmy?
23:24It's fit to collapse
23:25and blacker than a coal mine.
23:29White really isn't
23:30a very practical cover
23:31for a building.
23:33Oh, I don't doubt
23:34it can be rebuilt.
23:36More concerned
23:37about the next inhabitants.
23:40Seems that this house
23:42is a lightning rod
23:44for trouble.
23:46Oh, I don't know.
23:55Oh, I don't know.
23:58Oh, I don't know.
24:01Oh, I don't know.
24:02Oh, I don't know.
24:02Oh, I don't know.
24:03Oh, I don't know.
24:04Oh, I don't know.
24:04Oh, I don't know.
24:04Oh, I don't know.
24:05Oh, I don't know.
24:05Oh, I don't know.
24:07Oh, I don't know.
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