3. 5 stars, rounded up. This 24 lecture course is by Professor Edward Ayers. This is his first course that I have listened to. He is well spoken and does not have any distracting speech mannerisms. As expected, this course leans heavily into the history of slavery. The course starts with the beginning of the first southern colonies and the importation of the first slaves to the region in 1619. The majority of the course concerns the period of the antebellum South and the lead up to the Civil War. The Civil War is a pretty well told story, so I was hoping to learn more about the Reconstruction period. This course did that, but only with a few lectures, it easily could have gone more in depth into this very complex period. The last few lectures cover up to the 1920's, but the lectures are not chronological all the way through, the last lecture goes back to cover the Gilded Age, which I thought was odd.
The title is a bit misleading, the history only covers up to 1920, with the majority of lectures covering 1820-1865. That's fine if that is the professor's preference, but since the title does not indicate that the history leaves a whole century out, I feel it is a little misleading. There are other newer Great Courses that cover this time period, but it adds a bit of incompleteness to this lecture series.