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McCausland College of Arts and Sciences

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America 250

The University of South Carolina joins people across the United States to celebrate 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

Throughout 2026, faculty and staff from throughout the university will host events exploring the ideas that inspired the founders, the history of revolutionary-era America, and the way the nation has wrestled with the ideals of the founding principles in a pluralistic and sometimes divided republic.

The Center for American Civic Leadership and Public Discourse hosts this page to share events and insights from throughout the university.

2026 Events

January 20

Rabbi Meir Soloveichik presents “George Washington's Jewish Letters and the Creation of a Constitutional Republic.”

7- 8:30, Karen J. Williams Courtroom, Joseph F. Rice School of Law.

Register

Sponsored by the Center for American Civic Leadership and Public Discourse.

January 22

Osita Nwanevu presents Democracy and the Case for a New American Founding.

5- 6:30 pm, Campus Room, First Floor of Capstone House (902 Barnwell St)

Sponsored by the Mellon Grant Initiative: Civic Engagement, Voting Rights, and the Founding Documents.

February 19–20

Jamie Druckman, author of Partisan Hostility and American Democracy, will discuss "Distrust, Polarization, and Dissatisfaction" from 5-6:30 p.m.

Sponsored by the Mellon Grant Initiative: Civic Engagement, Voting Rights, and the Founding Documents.

February 23

History Faculty member Benjamin Schaffer will discuss his recently published book, The First Fleets: Colonial Navies of the British Atlantic World, c. 1630-1775. Light refreshments will be served. Gambrell 428, 3:00-3:45

February 28

Join Michael Weisenburg, director of the Irvin Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, for a special Saturday presentation of University Libraries’ exhibit on our nation’s founding, with special attention to South Carolina’s pivotal role and the ways it has been commemorated over time. The program will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Hollings Special Collections Library as part of the Echoes of Independence Open Gallery.

March 23

A conversation with Andrew Lawler and USC history professor Sean Gallagher.

Kendall Room at the South Caroliniana Library from  5:30 - 7:30 p.m.

Sponsored by the History Center.

March 24

Brooke Bauer presents the 2026 Dr. Mary Baskin-Waters Lecture on the topic, “Indigenous Women in the North American Southeast.”

Sponsored by the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies.

April 13–14

Conference on Civic Engagement and the Constitutional Order. Featured speakers include Jedediah Purdy, Deva Woodly, Kate Andrias, Arlie Hochschild, Astra Taylor, Josiah Ober, and others.

Sponsored by the Mellon Grant Initiative: Civic Engagement, Voting Rights, and the Founding Documents.

April 23

Percival Everett, National Book Award- and Pulitzer Prize-winning author, in a special appearance at The Open Book to discuss his book, James, an action-packed reimagining of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 

Johnson Performance Hall - 1014 Greene St at 6:00 p.m.

October 26

A lecture on Abraham Lincoln by historian Alan Guelzo.

October 27

The student orchestra will perform Aaron Copland’s A Lincoln Portrait with Alan Guelzo providing narration.




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