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Colonial Williamsburg’s Revolutionary in Residence program continues in September with Gordon Wood, a historian, Brown University professor and Pulitzer Prize-winner. The foundation announced details about his residency Thursday.

“The Revolutionaries in Residence program allows Colonial Williamsburg opportunities to partner with distinguished figures at the top of their respective fields and crafts,” Ghislain d’Humières, Colonial Williamsburg’s senior vice president of core operations, said in a news release.

In 1969, Wood began teaching at Brown, where he now works as the Alva O. Way University Professor Emeritus. He has written several books, including “The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin,” “The Creation of the American Republic, 1776-1787,” and “The Radicalism of the American Revolution,” which earned him the Pulitzer Prize for History and a Ralph Waldo Emerson Prize.

President Barack Obama awarded Wood the National Humanities Medal in 2010, and Colonial Williamsburg bestowed upon him its Churchill Bell award in 2011.

“Gordon’s extensive knowledge of American history, and his expertise on the then-radical ideas of the American Revolution, make him a natural fit for the Revolutionaries in Residence program,” d’Humières said. “We are excited to welcome Gordon to his residency and look forward to learning from his scholarship.”

During his residency, Wood will lead a panel dubbed “Friends Divided: A Revolutionary in Residence Conversation” in the Hennage Auditorium Sept. 15. The program incorporates Kurt Smith, who portrays a young Thomas Jefferson for Colonial Williamsburg, and Bill Barker, who portrays Jefferson in later days as president. Building on the foundation of Wood’s book, “Friends Divided: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson,” it reflects on Jefferson’s friendship and rivalry with fellow Founding Father John Adams.

Wood’s residency also includes discussions with Colonial Williamsburg staff and a feature in the foundation’s “Trend and Tradition” magazine.

“Colonial Williamsburg is the greatest living history museum in the world,” Wood said in a news release. “I consider it a privilege to be a Revolutionary in Residence, and I look forward to talking with the staff and questioning Thomas Jefferson as a young man and as president.”

Want to go?

“Friends Divided” runs 2 p.m. Sept. 15 at the Art Museums of Colonial Williamsburg’s Hennage Auditorium. Tickets are $10. For more information, visit bit.ly/2n4BO1l or call 855-296-6627.