Cavalcadeofamerica 262 Anamericanisborn
As the familiar orchestral fanfare fades into the warm amber glow of the radio dial, listeners are transported to the delivery room of a humble American home where a new life—and a new destiny—awaits. "An American Is Born" captures the raw immediacy of childbirth during the early twentieth century, when bringing a child into the world meant quiet heroism from the women who endured it and the doctors who attended them. The tension crackles through your speaker as complications threaten both mother and child, forcing an aging physician to draw upon decades of experience and moral conviction. This is intimate, domestic drama at its finest—no trumpets or battles, just the profound stakes of life itself. The episode deftly weaves the personal anguish of one family with the broader promise that every American birth represents: hope, potential, and the continuation of a democratic ideal.
Cavalcade of America was DuPont's answer to a growing appetite for programs that celebrated the nation's character during troubled times. Airing throughout the Depression and war years, the show insisted that American greatness resided not merely in great men or momentous events, but in ordinary citizens confronting extraordinary choices. Each episode illuminated a different facet of national identity—from the medical pioneers who saved lives to the immigrants who built cities. By focusing on "An American Is Born," the writers remind audiences that the nation's true strength flows from its people, generation after generation, each arriving as a bundle of possibility and promise.
Tune in and witness how one moment in a quiet room becomes a meditation on life, duty, and the American character. This is radio drama as it was meant to be heard—personal, powerful, and profoundly moving.