Their unrequited choice seemed utterly uninterested in the role
A gift from an old friend is one of Mount Vernon’s most fascinating objects
100 Years of Women at the Ballot Box
The 1924 Convention was the first to feature female delegates, and they made their presence known
The basketball legend has always had a writer's touch
More than 60 years ago, a broken soda fountain led to this cool invention
An entire colony of English settlers disappeared from Roanoke Island, just outside North Carolina's Outer Banks
Sarah Winchester inherited a fortune and used it to construct a mysterious mansion in northern California
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Alaska
From onion domes to tsarist-era Russian dialects, evidence of the Russian colonialism remains
The First Lady was a trailblazer who flew under the radar as a quiet champion of Civil Rights and protecting the environment
At the half-century mark, for the National Organization for Women it is still personal—and political
Readers on July 4, 1915 learned the story of a would-be assassin who said he was trying to keep the U.S. out of the European conflict
During his lifetime, abolitionists ridiculed Key’s words, sneering that America was more like the “Land of the Free and Home of the Oppressed”
They also have very little to do with the New York City amusement park
The world created by former slaves in Liberia was a cruel paradox for more than 150 years
Photographer Daniella Zalcman explores how native populations had a new nation foisted upon them
A series of three photo essays explores how America has treated its own people in times of crisis
Photographer Dan Winters shows us the modern-day life of an unheralded World War II veteran
Early iterations saved soldiers' lives, debunked myths about slavery and helped Americans settle the frontier
Jamie M. Allen explores how conservation and consumerism have impacted America's natural heritage
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