How objects both ordinary and extraordinary help us reflect on the devastation
During FDR’s administration, the First Lady and the Mayor of New York clashed over guns, butter and American liberalism
On view in the new museum, the woodframe dwelling evokes the aspirations and limitations of the era following enslavement
Independence Day in 1970 at Yosemite National Park should have been an occasion for celebration. Instead, it became a day of violence
Wildlife management in national parks has come a long way in recent decades. In the '70s, visitors were regularly encouraged to feed bears
A special edition of Ask Smithsonian on the occasion of the opening of a new Smithsonian museum
The Great Dismal Swamp was once a thriving refuge for runaways
The next generation is following in the footsteps of its forebears
Early conservation research and scientific expeditions laid the groundwork and helped to convince the public national parks were a good idea
When millions of African-Americans fled the South in search of a better life, they remade the nation in ways that are still being felt
Author and playwright John Biguenet offers his thoughts on the narrative of destruction
From courting Chuck Berry in Missouri to diving for a lost slave ship off Africa, the director's tale is a fascinating one
These artifacts each tell a part of the African-American story
Is blues music a thing of the past? A festival in Memphis featuring musicians of all ages and nationalities shouts an upbeat answer
When millionaire John D. Rockefeller Jr. first visited Jackson Hole, Wyoming in 1926, he vowed to preserve the awe-inspiring land
The Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery is setting its sights on the future
Women have long fought against the assumption that they are weaker than men, and the battle isn’t over yet
Artists, historians and filmmakers alike have been guilty of creating a mythologized version of the U.S. expansion to the west
It’s a pretty scary story. It does involve clowns, after all
As many as 500,000 tule elk once roamed the coast of California, but they were hunted to extinction in the mid-1860s. Or so we thought...
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