American History
How Comics Captured America’s Opinions About the Vietnam War
More than any other medium, comics closely followed the narrative arc of the conflict, from support to growing ambivalence
New Book of Photographs Recalls the Trauma of American History
Looking back at a lynching that shocked America and galvanized the civil rights movement
The Story of Muckraker Upton Sinclair’s Dramatic Campaign for Governor of California
Sinclair was as famous in his day as any movie-star candidate who came later
How This Washington, D.C. Museum Redefined What Museums Could Be
Fifty years after its founding, the Smithsonian's beloved Anacostia Community Museum continues to tell stories heard nowhere else
Photographer Reconstructs 1,400-Mile Route Along the Underground Railroad
'Through Darkness to Light: Photographs Along the Underground Railroad' traces a plausible path a freedom seeker could have taken North
The Making of the Modern American Recipe
Scientific methods, rising literacy and an increasingly mobile society were key ingredients for a culinary revolution
Why The Pap Test Could Also Be Called the Stern Test
Elizabeth Stern played a vital role in cervical cancer testing and treatment
Children Used to Learn About Death and Damnation With Their ABCs
In 19th-century New England, the books that taught kids how to read had a Puritanical morbidity to them
Man Who Saved the World From Nuclear Annihilation Dies at 77
In 1983, Soviet lieutenant colonel Stanislav Petrov kept his cool and reported a U.S. missile strike as a false alarm, preventing a massive counterstrike
When the Idea of Home Was Key to American Identity
From log cabins to Gilded Age mansions, how you lived determined where you belonged
Turn-of-the-Century Kid's Books Taught Wealthy, White Boys the Virtues of Playing Football
A founder of the NCAA, Walter Camp thought that sport was the cure for the social anxiety facing parents in America's upper class
Fans of Minecraft Are Sure to Dig this Nationwide Museum Fest
The indie hit is the perfect game for a day devoted to unearthing knowledge
How President William McKinley’s Assassination Led to the Modern Secret Service
Before McKinley's death, the president didn't have one united protective squad
‘Spinster’ and ‘Bachelor’ Were, Until 2005, Official Terms for Single People
Being single is hard enough without these pejoratives.
Henry Bliss, America’s First Pedestrian Fatality, Was Hit By an Electric Taxi
The driver was arrested but released after hitting Bliss
A Brief History of Chocolate in the United States
Eating chocolate is a relatively new innovation
How 'Mortal Kombat' Changed Video Games
According to one of its creators, the infamously gory game got caught up in a transitional moment in video gaming
The Misguided Focus on 1619 as the Beginning of Slavery in the U.S. Damages Our Understanding of American History
The year the first enslaved Africans were brought to Jamestown is drilled into students’ memories, but overemphasizing this date distorts history
How the Nauga and its Fictional Friends Helped Make Synthetic Fabric Cuddly
What started out as an advertising ploy turned into a low-key cultural phenomenon
Why Everyone Went on a Wild Goose Chase Looking for the Planet Vulcan
The idea of a ninth planet in the Solar System would resolve a mathematical conundrum about Mercury–only problem is, it wasn't there
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