What I think is the most important story we get to share and study, which is, the American Revolution. I mean, that's the Bible for 'where do we come from?' and 'what does it all mean?'. We get to look for example, I do this with kids often, do you guys know that just three weeks after Concord and Lexington, American rebel forces, American forces, captured a boat on Lake Champlain in Whitehall, Skeinsborough, rode it up to Ticonderoga and as they rowed it, the surviving journal of the officer on board says, 'We christen this boat Liberty.'

Woah. What were they talking about? What were they thinking about? What was that discussion like? And how do we enrich our understanding of that through these touchstones in history that allow us to reexamine that stuff. And that's where, you know, every place has history and every place's history is fascinating, important and relevant.

What we get through Lake Champlain is a, I think a, a more diverse look at world history, the old world becoming the new world, the evolution of North America and society, and how we've chosen to live in it. So it's really just a, an amazing privilege and opportunity to do this.