American History
Linda Brown, at the Center of Brown v. Board of Education, Has Died
After being refused enrollment at an all-white school in Topeka, Kansas, Brown's court case led to the historic Supreme Court ruling that ended segregation
First Museum Committed to Sharing the Stories of Historically Black Colleges Opens
The HBCU Museum in Washington, D.C., launched March 9 and has plans to expand to a second location in Atlanta
What Happened When a Southern Airways Flight 242 Crashed in Sadie Burkhalter’s Front Yard
Her home became a makeshift hospital when she looked out her front door to a fiery inferno
The Drama Intensifies When “Timeless” Visits “Hollywoodland”
A plot to steal ‘Citizen Kane’ and a visit from inventor Hedy Lamarr give the Time Team a taste of the movie industry’s golden age
How Portraiture Gave Rise to the Glamour of Guns
American portraiture with its visual allure and pictorial storytelling made gun ownership desirable
California Once Targeted Latinas for Forced Sterilization
In the 20th century, U.S. eugenics programs rendered tens of thousands of people infertile
From Yoga to Movie Nights: How Cemeteries Are Trying to Attract the Living
These cemeteries around the country are more public space than burial ground
Ruth McGinnis: The Queen of Billiards
Back when pool was a serious sport that grabbed the attention of the nation, one woman smoked the competition
How Archie Bunker Forever Changed in the American Sitcom
The return of ABC’s ‘Roseanne’ inspires a reevaluation of television's history of portraying the working class
Why Don't We See Fireflies in the Western U.S.?
You asked, we answered
These Newly Donated Artifacts Capture the Spirit of Washington, D.C. Drag
Mementos from the Academy of Washington drag organization add a valuable thread to the tapestry of American LGBTQ history
Investigators on Lookout for 314 Items Stolen From Carnegie Library’s Rare Books Room
A first edition of Isaac Newton’s “Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica” was among the items taken
Tennessee Votes to Keep Polk's Grave Where It Is. For Now
A resolution to move the grave from the capitol grounds in Nashville to one of his boyhood homes failed by one vote
A New Memorial Remembers the Thousands of African-Americans Who Were Lynched
Next month's opening of the monument in Alabama will be a necessary step in reckoning with America's deadly past
Monument to a Historic Black Woman Will Replace Racist Statue in Pittsburgh
A city task force is asking the public to help decide who should be honored
"Timeless" Races Back to the ’50s in ‘Darlington’
The second episode of the season highlights an underappreciated NASCAR driver from the sport’s earliest days
The Prolific Illustrator Behind Kewpies Used Her Cartoons for Women’s Rights
Rose O’Neill started a fad and became a leader of a movement
Ben Franklin May Be Responsible for Bringing Tofu to America
How a letter of 1770 may have ushered the Chinese staple into the New World
The Tragedy of Cattle Kate
Newspapers reported that cowgirl Ella Watson was a no-good thief who deserved the vigilante killing that befell her, when in reality she was anything but
How I Learned About the “Cult of the Lost Cause”
The mayor of New Orleans offers his reading list for anyone looking to better understand the real history of Confederate monuments
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