The power bestowed upon the chief executive to excuse past misdeeds has involved a number of famous Americans
Charles Lang Freer gifted this meditative haven for art lovers to the nation and was James McNeill Whistler's friend and patron
A Connecticut dentist, turned curator of a new exhibition, has long worked to solve the secrets of the whale's characteristic horn
America’s favorite processed breakfast was once the pinnacle of healthfulness—and spiritual purity
When a Texas railway agent came up with a new marketing scheme, he had no idea how explosive it would be
For five days in July, the Motor City was under siege from looters and soldiers alike
How peering at babies through glass became a feel-good staple of American maternity wards
How the retail store that taught America how to shop navigated more than a century of economic and cultural change
Dolley Madison, the First Lady of president James Madison was a Jackie Kennedy of her time
In the early 20th century, 96% of all jobs on the U.S. rail network were male. But by the start of WWI, it fell on women to fill in for them
Elbridge Gerry was a powerful voice in the founding of the nation, but today he's best known for the political practice with an amphibious origin
From a KKK hood to an anti-Chinese pistol, a new exhibition shows America’s fraught history of deciding who to include in democracy
In the deadly Astor Place Riot, how to perform Shakespeare served as a proxy for class warfare
James Monroe’s 1817 goodwill tour kicked off a decade of party-less government – but he couldn’t stop the nation from dividing again
Over the years, the American buffalo, or bison, has been a symbol of the American frontier
Jam-packed exhibition features artifacts as diverse as Jefferson's Bible, a steeple bell cast by Paul Revere and a storied Torah
In a town that has long profited from witchcraft-seekers and Halloween revelers alike, a new memorial strikes a different tone
The director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, and a citizen of the Pawnee Nation, speaks out against the D.C. sports franchise
Prior to the arrival of Pocahontas in England, indigenous people of the Americas were viewed as cannibals, brutish, and non-Christian
On the occasion of his 250th birthday, the making of our sixth president in his own words
Page 86 of 163