For the composer’s 250th birthday, visit the apartments where he lived, the theaters where he worked and his final resting place
The Great War was a “transformative moment” for African Americans, who fought for the U.S. even as they were denied access to Democracy
As average temperatures rise and extreme weather events become more common, vintners are forced to adapt year to year
Of the few who survived the Nazi camp complex, a handful returned to ensure the site couldn't be swept away into historical memory
From Chicago's Prohibition tours to Palau's newly enacted marine sanctuary, here are a dozen destinations to travel to this year
An alliance between dance impresario Alvin Ailey and photographer Jack Mitchell yielded more than 10,000 images
'Lennon Walls' have spread throughout Hong Kong and the world as a form of public protest and free expression
One of the most iconic food brands was born in the imagination of a teenager, Antonio Gentile. Curator Kathleen Franz introduces the story
Like sediment cores, ice samples and tree rings, bat excrement can be used to study the climate of the past
Slated for this year are new institutions dedicated to ancient Egyptian, the Olympics, African American music and the Army
The discovery of a legendary wreck raises questions about who should control sunken riches
The crab-eating fox and the coyote may soon swap territories, initiating the first American cross-continental exchange in more than three million years
Confederate agents seeking European support were imprisoned by the U.S. consul, which ignited international protest
A universal flu vaccine would eliminate the need for seasonal shots and defend against the next major outbreak
At the Portrait Gallery, a new show gets at the visual heart of competitive camaraderie roiling within artist colonies
The archaeological excavation of an empty field yielded clues and reminders of an incredible uprising long buried from history
Something needed to be done to mask the taste of bootleg alcohol that could include ingredients ranging from dead rats to wood tar
The journal pages of Charles Francis Adams, the son of one president and the grandson of another, illuminate the life and politics of Victorian England
A pair of pristinely preserved fossils suggest scorpions have looked mostly the same since they first crawled onto land
The new film 'Uncut Gems' calls attention to the 47th Street neighborhood, where million-dollar deals are sealed by handshakes
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