- [about the Scopes Monkey Trial]
- Host/Narrator: What Scopes represented and what the world came to witness was a colossal clash of ideals. The cool reasoning of science seem to threaten the deep and dividing roots of religion. It was one thing to replace the family mule with the Model T but quite another to trade Matthew, Mark and John for Einstein, Freud and Darwin. For many people these were confusing times. And what may have been most unsettling about the pace of change in the 1920s was that people wanted both the benefits of the future and the familiar comforts of the past."
- Lillian Hall Gerdau: My father was asked if he would like to join the Ku Klux Klan. He grabbed the guy by the collar and threw him down the stairs. Three nights later, almost directly across the street there was a large cross burning. My mother said 'It's almost as though they're guarding the gates of Hell'
- [about Lindbergh's landing]
- Ellie Sullivan: When Lindbergh came back, it was as though he walked on water. The public couldn't get enough of him. He was a star and there wasn't a woman in America who wasn't crazy about him
- [about the Wall Street crash of 1929]
- Clara Hancox: Overnight it was like bombs fell. People jumped off the George Washington bridge which had not long ago been built, people we knew! My father was wiped out, he never recovered, psychologically he never recovered.
- [about FDR]
- Ossie Davis: "He could, through the magic of his voice, involve you in the great adventure of making America work again
- Host/Narrator: In the second world war this century 50 million people would die, nearly half of them civilians. They would die not because they lived near enemy targets but because they were the targets.
- Hannah Greensueit: People being desperate will run after a man like Hitler
- Host/Narrator: On the first Sunday December 1941, Americans were doing what Americans did on any normal Sunday. Soon every American would know that over 2000 of their countrymen had perished in the Japanese attack on Hawaii's Pearl Harbor and that nearly half of the fleet had been destroyed
- [about the Hollywood blacklist]
- Lee Grant: It was scary. I was 19 and I took the fifth. Being an informer and placing your fellow actor, fellow director, fellow friend in jeopardy meant that that family didn't work anymore. So taking that step was about the worst thing you could do
- [about segregation]
- Bernice Reagon: If you went to the Dairy Queen, white people could go in and sit down but black people had to go to the window. That did not change until the civil rights movement
- [after WWI]
- Host/Narrator: In the wake of the First World War, Europe lay in ruins. Even the victors France and Britain grappled with ruin and rage. In all, 9 million men had died. Everyone knew someone who had died, a father, a brother, a cousin, a friend. For years, the wounded and the maimed haunted the streets of every city in Europe, grim reminders of The Great War.
- Robert McNamara: Make no mistake about it, if you make a mistake with regards to nuclear weapons you will destroy nations.
- [after Vietnam]
- Host/Narrator: The country had to now face the fact that there were some burdens too great to bear, some prices too steep to pay.
- Host/Narrator: In 1997, the people of Britain gathered for a final farewell to Princess Diana. 96 years earlier in 1901 the same streets were crowded for the funeral of Queen Victoria who had given her name to an entire era. The world changed more between those two funerals than it had in 1000 years of history.
- David McCullough: History isn't just about politicians, generals and wars and social issues. It's about the whole mix of the human experience, and it should be. It's about medicine and music; it's about love and money; its about good times; bad times; about people you never heard of; places you never heard of; certainly about failure, sometimes about success. It's human. It's about life. And what makes it most compelling- I think- is that its because its about two great mysteries: People, and time.