This Anti-Slavery Jewelry Shows the Social Concerns (and the Technology) of Its Time
The 'Wedgwood Slave Medallion' was the first modern piece of protest jewelry
Martin Luther King and Gandhi Weren’t the Only Ones Inspired By Thoreau’s ‘Civil Disobedience’
Thoreau's essay became a cornerstone of 20th-century protest
The Bowdlers Wanted to Clean Up Shakespeare, Not Become a Byword for Censorship
Thomas and Henrietta Bowdler started out with relatively noble intentions
The Tin Man Is a Reminder of L. Frank Baum’s Onetime Oil Career
Baum had a number of careers before he hit it big with 'The Wizard of Oz'
Today We Use Lasers For Almost Everything. But They Took a Long Time to Seem Useful
After the first laser was built in 1960, it took a long time before laser products were on the mass market
This Unremembered US-France 'Quasi War' Shaped Early America’s Foreign Relations
America wasn't officially at war with France between 1798 and 1800, but tell that to the U.S. Navy
Take a Look at the Patents Behind Sliced Bread
It took a surprising amount of technological know-how to make the bread that birthed the expression
This 1797 Impeachment Has Never Been Fully Resolved
Can an impeached senator be tried? Who knows! Let’s unpack this constitutional question
A Brief History of People Running Across America
Fictional character Forrest Gump wasn’t the only one to do it, not by a long shot
Why an Astronomer Turned to Trees to Try to Solve a Celestial Mystery
Andrew Ellicott Douglass's theory of sunspots and climate was wrong, but he still pioneered the science of tree-ring dating
Someone Was Actually Trying to Build a Casino Three Miles From the Gettysburg Battle Site
A local businessman said the casino would bring jobs and money to the historic region–but other locals said gaming would irrevocably change Gettysburg
Suggested Alternative Dates for Independence Day
The reason Independence Day is on July 4 isn’t very robust
The Crazy Story of the 1946 Bikini Atoll Nuclear Tests
They were the first time that a nuclear weapon had been deployed since the 1945 attacks on Japan
Lincoln's Signature Laid the Groundwork for the National Park System
The "Yo-Semite Valley" was made a California state park on this day in 1864, but it quickly became a national park
Three Ways the Interstate System Changed America
The idea of a national highway system stretches back to the 1930s but wasn't put into place until the midcentury
The First Printed Fried Chicken Recipe in America
A white Virginian woman named Mary Randolph was the first to publish it, but fried chicken's Southern history is deeper than 'The Virginia Housewife'
These Beautiful Medieval Wafer Presses Are Where Waffles Come From
Leggo my flat, fancy Eggo
Americans Caught ‘Victoria Fever’ For The British Queen’s 1838 Coronation
Such delicacies as 'Victoria soap' could be bought in America as a souvenir of the occasion
Robert Oppenheimer’s Career Ended Long After the Bang, With a Whimper
The rivalry between Edward Teller and Robert Oppenheimer ended both their careers
Three Big Ableist Myths About the Life of Helen Keller
The simple story that's usually told about her today reflects cultural biases that have nothing to do with her actual life
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