How Captain John Voss put his dugout canoe—and himself—to the ultimate test
Harriet Bell Hayden is believed to have helped hundreds of people fleeing slavery from her Beacon Hill residence
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The third president knew that the whims of nature shaped Americans' daily lives as farmers and enslavers
A new exhibition spotlights the ways in which cultures around the world have sought answers in the face of uncertainty
Descendants of people enslaved at the site are grappling with its complicated history while also honoring the region's rich culture
The eighth president of the United States, the so-called little magician, saw political parties as the key to achieving power
Smithsonian curators remember and honor the 39th president’s uncompromising idealism
In the waterways connected to the Great Lakes, researchers uncover boats that tell the story of millennia of Indigenous history
A new film starring Timothée Chalamet tracks Dylan's evolution from an acoustic folk singer to a rock 'n' roll superstar
Unlike much of Georgia, the historic port city was preserved from Sherman’s wrath, but suffered psychological terror nonetheless
A 19th-century scholar claimed that "Cocker's Arithmetick" had "probably made as much stir and noise in the English world as any [book]—next to the Bible"
The United States Postal Service and volunteers have responded to North Pole holiday correspondence over the past century
Inside the fight to memorialize victims of the military junta that ruled over the South American nation in the 1970s and '80s
The Carolina Corps achieved emancipation through military service, paving the way for future fighters in the British Empire to do the same
A new book examines the rise and fall of the Carolingian dynasty, discussing how people across social classes understood the momentous history of their day
The Black, female unit sorted through a massive backlog of undelivered mail, raising American soldiers' morale during World War II
The decline of the American South's cotton and sugar industries paved the way for plantations in British-controlled Fiji and Australia, where victims of "blackbirding" endured horrific working conditions
In 1935, dozens of rhesus macaques absconded from Frank Buck's Long Island menagerie. Nearly a century later, 43 members of the same species broke out of a South Carolina research facility
Our favorite titles of the year resurrect forgotten histories and examine how the United States ended up where it is today