American History
500-Year-Old Pistol Part Could Shed Light on Colorado’s Spanish Colonial Past
The pistol part was found during an excavation several years ago by the Museums of Western Colorado’s Western Investigations Team
The 19th-Century “Golden Hours” Convention Brought Young Readers Together to Meet Their Literary Heroes
The dime novels and story papers entertained boys and launched a popular culture we still consume today
Rare 1906 San Francisco Earthquake Footage Found at Flea Market
The nine-minute Miles brothers film reel shows the devastation that the powerful quake wrought
These Photos Captured What Happened When the United States Started to Ration Shoes During WWII
Seventy-five years ago, the Office for Price Administration wanted to limit the use of leather on the homefront
York Explored the West With Lewis and Clark, but His Freedom Wouldn't Come Until Decades Later
In some ways, he encountered a world unavailable to the enslaved. But in others, the journey was rife with danger and degradation
This Historic Gavel Hammers Home the Achievements of Nancy Pelosi… and the United States
The congresswoman donates to the Smithsonian artifacts tied to her first day as Speaker of the House in 2007
Two Museum Directors Say It’s Time to Tell the Unvarnished History of the U.S.
History isn’t pretty and sometimes it is vastly different than what we’ve been taught, say Lonnie Bunch and Kevin Gover
Study Shows Little Change Since Kerner Commission Reported on Racism 50 Years Ago
An update to the landmark study finds there is now more poverty and segregation in America
How the 1918 Flu Pandemic Helped Advance Women’s Rights
While the virus disproportionately affected young men, women stepped into public roles that hadn't previously been open to them
The 1968 Kerner Commission Got It Right, But Nobody Listened
Released 50 years ago, the infamous report found that poverty and institutional racism were driving inner-city violence
Women Who Shaped History
Collecting the stories of women who forever changed the course of the American story
A Classic American Cheerleading Troupe Tumbles to Smithsonian Immortality
"America's Sweethearts" are as dedicated to social service as they are to the Dallas Cowboys
There’s Great Drama Within the Truths of “The Looming Tower”
How filmmaker Alex Gibney brought a documentarian’s eye to the story of the 9/11 attacks
One Man's Search to Find the Families of the "Deportees" in the Famous Woody Guthrie Song
Seventy years after the 1948 crash, Tim Hernandez is bringing new recognition to the 28 unidentified "braceros" who died when the plane blew up
The Political Circus and Constitutional Crisis of Andrew Johnson’s Impeachment
When the 17th president was accused of high crimes and misdemeanors in 1868, the wild trial nearly reignited the Civil War
When Emancipation Finally Came, Slave Markets Took on a Redemptive Purpose
During the Civil War, the jails that held the enslaved imprisoned Confederate soldiers. After, they became rallying points for a newly empowered community
This Mysterious Event Led to the Spanish-American War
In early 1898, the USS Maine sailed into Havana harbor as a show of support for the Cuban revolutionaries
Smithsonian’s Curator of Religion on Billy Graham’s Legacy
He was among the most influential religious leaders in U.S. history, says Peter Manseau
How Tennessee Became the Final Battleground in the Fight for Suffrage
One hundred years later, the campaign for the women’s vote has many potent similarities to the politics of today
How One Amateur Historian Brought Us the Stories of African-Americans Who Knew Abraham Lincoln
Once John E. Washington started to dig, he found an incredible wealth of untapped knowledge about the 16th president
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