Walter Mondale Never Won the Presidency, but He Changed American Politics Forever
A trove of Smithsonian artifacts document the man who was first to put a woman on the presidential ticket and reshaped the vice presidency
The Thorny Politics of Presidential Portraiture
In a new podcast, the National Portrait Gallery reveals that a portrait is being commissioned of the former president
Who Were the Scottsboro Nine?
The young black men served a combined total of 130 years for a crime they never committed
Why John Glenn Couldn't Escape the Hero Label
A new book explores the man who would serve his country as a fighter pilot, an astronaut and a U.S. Senator
Why Elaine de Kooning's Portrait of JFK Broke All the Rules
After the assassination, the grief-stricken artist painted the president’s image obsessively; finally saying she caught only "a glimpse" of him
Will Rogers Was One of a Kind
The popular raconteur touched Americans with his humor, newspaper columns, movie star power, philanthropy and as political agitator
How a Maverick Hip-Hop Legend Found Inspiration in a Titan of American Industry
When LL COOL J sat for his portrait, he found common ground with the life-long philanthropical endeavors of John D. Rockefeller
Why Harriet Tubman’s Heroic Military Career Is Now Easier to Envision
The strong, youthful visage of the famed underground railroad conductor is the subject of the Portrait Gallery’s podcast “Portraits”
Revisit the Brutal Fight When Jack Dempsey Hammered the Super-Sized Champ to Claim Title
The crowded scene on a sweltering July day in Toledo is the subject of the Portrait Gallery’s latest podcast episode
How the Crew of the Damaged Apollo 13 Came Home
Using the lunar module as a lifeboat and employing techniques never before considered, the astronauts' ordeal ended triumphantly
Facing Blizzards and Accidents, Iditarod’s First Woman Champion Libby Riddles Persisted
A sled in the Smithsonian collections marks the historic race
The Northern White Rhino Went Extinct, But for Two Minutes at a Time, the Animal Makes a Digital Comeback
An artist's 3-D recreation of the immense mammal probes the paradox of efforts to bring such animals back in the lab
Trove of Stunning Dance Photography Now Online
An alliance between dance impresario Alvin Ailey and photographer Jack Mitchell yielded more than 10,000 images
When the Yankees Got the Larger-Than-Life Babe Ruth
It was a fateful December a century ago, when the Red Sox-Yankees trade launched a dynasty; a Smithsonian curator reflects on the legendary home-run hitter
In 1954, an Extraterrestrial Bruiser Shocked This Alabama Woman
Ann Hodges remains the only human known to have been injured by direct impact of a meteorite
Was the 1968 TV Show 'Julia' a Milestone or a Millstone for Diversity?
Diahann Carroll's award-winning series was a hit, but it delivered a sanitized view of African-American life
Sculptor Edmonia Lewis Shattered Gender and Race Expectations in 19th-Century America
As the orphaned child of a black father and a Native-American mother, Lewis rewrote the 19th-century definition of sculptor
How Neil, Buzz and Mike Got Their Workouts in on Their Way to the Moon and Back
To counter the effects of weightlessness, NASA equipped Apollo 11 with an Exer-Genie for isometric exercises
Thank This World War II-Era Film Star for Your Wi-Fi
As the National Portrait Gallery acquires a film poster of Hedy Lamarr, it’s worth reflecting on her double life as an actress and a pioneering inventor
Rita Rapp Fed America’s Space Travelers
NASA’s food packages now in the collections of the Air and Space Museum tell the story of how a physiologist brought better eating to outer space
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