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Constitution

Wheatley Affiliated Scholar Wins Nation's Leading Prize for Founding Era History

Tyson Reeder, an Affiliated Scholar for Wheatley Institute's Constitution Initiative, was awarded the prestegious George Washington Prize for his book Serpent in Eden. The book is an exploration of foreign meddling in early American politics, analyzing both the ways in which foreign powers swayed American democracy and the ways the new republic attempted to respond. The work was praised as "a blend of wonderful storytelling and intriguing characters along with perceptive historical analysis. . . . This important contribution stands out as an incredibly timely and relevant book for how we can use the past to understand the present."

The George Washington Prize, offered by George Washington’s Mount Vernon and the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, is a yearly $50,000 award honoring "year's best works on the nation's founding era."

Read more on the official website.