Artifact of the Week
To Save His Dying Sister-In-Law, Charles Lindbergh Invented a Medical Device
The famous aviator’s biography is incomplete without the story of how the aviator worked to perfect his glass-chambered perfusion pump
The Big, Refrigerator-Sized Machine That Saved Chocolate
When cacao production was threatened by disease, the Mars candy company launched a global initiative to sequence the plant's genome
Thirty Years Ago, an Artificial Heart Helped Save a Grocery Store Manager
The Smithsonian, home to the Jarvik 7 and a host of modern chest-pumping technologies, has a lot of (artificial) heart
The Story of Mexican Coke Is a Lot More Complex Than Hipsters Would Like to Admit
A nasty trade war and questionable scientific assumptions make it difficult to discern what is, and what isn't, the real thing
How a Five-Letter Word Built a 104-Year-Old Company
THINK—printed on signs, deskplates, business cards and notepads—was the seed from which the rest of IBM’s culture would grow
The Entertaining Saga of the Worst Crook in Colonial America
Stephen Burroughs was a thief, a counterfeiter and a convicted criminal. A rare piece of his fake currency is in the collections
How Singer Won the Sewing Machine War
The Singer Sewing Machine changed the way America manufactured textiles, but the invention itself was less important than the company’s innovative business
How Colonel Sanders Made Kentucky Fried Chicken an American Success Story
A weathervane from the Smithsonian collections is emblematic of Harland Sanders’s decades-long pursuit to make his chicken finger-lickin' good
A Dozen Indigenous Craftsman From Peru Will Weave Grass into a 60-Foot Suspension Bridge in Washington, D.C.
The ancient technology used lightweight materials to create soaring 150-foot spans that could hold the weight of a marching army
How Radio DJ Hoppy Adams Powered his 50,000-Watt Annapolis Station into a Mighty Influence
In post-war America, as advertisers discovered African American audiences, one local disc jockey drew top recording stars and a huge following
What a 1950s Fashion Maven Might Teach Us About What To Wear
When it was time to suit up for work, politics or social engagements, Claire McCardell's fans embraced her chic, but comfortable style
How the Summer of Atomic Bomb Testing Turned the Bikini Into a Phenomenon
The scanty suit’s explosive start is intimately tied to the Cold War and the nuclear arms race
The Ill-Fated History of the Jet Pack
The space-age invention still takes our imaginations on our wild ride
How Nylon Stockings Changed the World
The quest to replace natural silk led to the very first fully synthetic fiber and revolutionized the products we depend on
The Huey Defined America's Presence in Vietnam, Even to the Bitter End
The 40th anniversary of the Fall of Saigon presents a chance for one Vietnam War correspondent to look back at the iconic helicopter
Meet the Makech, the Bedazzled Beetles Worn as Living Jewelry
The unusual bugs from the Yucatán have a backstory as colorful as their rhinestone-studded rumps
Why Albert Einstein, the Genius Behind the Theory of Relativity, Loved His Pipe
Einstein reportedly believed that pipe smoking contributed to a calm and objective judgment, but his doctor said give it up
The First Jogbra Was Made by Sewing Together Two Men's Athletic Supporters
An archive collected from the sports company reveals that the bra gave a boost to women's athletics
There's More to This Towering Pink Easter Bunny Than Kitsch
Evoking springtime and rebirth, African burial ritual, rhythm, and identity, the "soundsuit" by artist Nick Cave is packed with iconic themes
New Works by Nam June Paik Are Discovered at the Smithsonian American Art Museum
While inventorying the massive archival materials left by the artist, a researcher comes across forgotten works of art
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