American History
The Transformation of the American Shopping Mall
Headlines claim malls are dying, and some are. But many others are having second lives as churches, schools, hospitals, even farms
Five Architects on the One Building They Wish Had Been Preserved
From an elegant solution to urban density to a magnificent financial hub
We Legitimize the 'So-Called' Confederacy With Our Vocabulary, and That's a Problem
Tearing down monuments is only the beginning to understanding the false narrative of Jim Crow
Why 30,000 People Came Out to See a Swedish Singer Arrive in New York
Most of them had never even heard Jenny Lind sing
Before She Was an Etiquette Authority, Emily Post Was a Road Warrior
Post didn't drive herself, but she laid claim to her own authority on the road in other ways
From Egyptian Cats to Crime Scenes, Here's a Preview of the Smithsonian's Upcoming Shows
Gallery-goers in D.C. and NYC are in for a mental workout with shows that deliver on everything from the experimental to the traditional
More Than a Century Later, This Texas Hurricane Remains America’s Deadliest Natural Disaster
The Great Galveston Hurricane helped the city of Houston to rise to prominence
This Nineteenth-Century Genealogist Argued Norse God Odin Was George Washington’s Great-Great-Great... Grandfather
Albert Welles's ideas about whiteness were a reflection of his time, and would be continued into the future
In the 19th Century, You Wouldn’t Want to Be Put on the Treadmill
This grueling nineteenth-century punishment was supposed to provide a torturous lesson about hard work
The Wild West of Knott's Berry Farm Is More Fantasy Than Reality
A critic of government welfare, the theme park's Walter Knott built the first “Old West” town as a shrine to rugged individualism
The Bizarre Story of Piggly Wiggly, the First Self-Service Grocery Store
What's in a name?
The Youngest of the Little Rock Nine Speaks About Holding on to History
Carlotta Walls LeNier, whose school dress is in the Smithsonian, says much was accomplished and now we need to hold onto it
Ruth Odom Bonner, Who Rang the Freedom Bell With President Obama, Passes Away at 100
Looking back on the redoubtable woman who helped inaugurate the African American History Museum
Long Before Siri, Emma Nutt's Voice Was on the Other End of the Line
She was the first female telephone operator. Before her, telephone operators were teenaged boys. That didn't go so well
The 1919 Black Sox Baseball Scandal Was Just One of Many
They say baseball "lost its innocence" after 1919, but betting and other improper behavior was rampant in early-20th-century baseball
Striking Union Workers Turned the First Labor Day Into a Networking Event
The end-of-summer holiday was designed to spur overworked Americans to meet up, picnic and call for fairer labor laws
The Vacuum Cleaner Was Harder to Invent Than You Might Think
The original vacuum cleaner required a number of improvements before becoming the household staple it is today
Desegregation Came Early at the Texas Prison Rodeo
Before Brown vs. Board of Education, the “convict cowboys” of the Texas prison system showed off their bucking bronco skills
The Case Thurgood Marshall Never Forgot
Fifty years ago today, Thurgood Marshall became a Supreme Court justice. He kept telling the story of the Groveland Four
This Man Is the Father of Modern American Suburbia
By 1951, two thirds of Americans lived in urban areas. Enter William Levitt, who would utilize construction techniques he learned to build affordable homes
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