The Gendered History of Human Computers
It’s ironic that women today must fight for equality in Silicon Valley. After all, their math skills helped launch the digital age
The ‘Clotilda,’ the Last Known Slave Ship to Arrive in the U.S., Is Found
The discovery carries intense personal meaning for an Alabama community of descendants of the ship’s survivors
In 1945, a Japanese Balloon Bomb Killed Six Americans, Five of Them Children, in Oregon
The military kept the true story of their deaths, the only civilians to die at enemy hands on the U.S. mainland, under wraps
New Brooklyn Museum Exhibit Explores the Cultural Memory of Stonewall
Artists born after the galvanizing moment in gay rights history, which took place 50 years ago, present their interpretations
Morse Code Celebrates 175 Years and Counting
The elegantly simple code works whether flashing a spotlight or blinking your eyes—or even tapping on a smartphone touchscreen
While seemingly a natural wonder of the world, the destination on the U.S./Canada border has been subject to human meddling for years
Apollo at 50: We Choose to Go to the Moon
A collection of stories to celebrate the semicentennial of the Apollo 11 mission
Apollo at 50: We Choose to Go to the Moon
What You Didn’t Know About the Apollo 11 Mission
From JFK’s real motives to the Soviets’ secret plot to land on the Moon at the same time, a new behind-the-scenes view of an unlikely triumph 50 years ago
The International Spy Museum details the audacious plan that involved a reclusive billionaire, a 618-foot-long ship, and a great deal of stealth
Meet Marion Donovan, the Mother Who Invented a Precursor to the Disposable Diaper
The prolific inventor with 20 patents to her name developed the “Boater,” a reusable, waterproof diaper cover in the late 1940s
A History of Cribs and Other Brilliant and Bizarre Inventions for Getting Babies to Sleep
Generations of parents have relied on contraptions, both clever and crazy, to give their infants—and themselves—some rest
Separating Truth From Myth in the So-Called ‘Golden Age’ of the Detroit Auto Industry
The post-war era’s labor unrest and market instability has seemingly been forgotten in the public’s memory
The Last Remaining Rail Car That ‘Witnessed’ the Transcontinental Railroad’s Momentous Day
‘Crocker’s Car’ brought the tycoon Leland Stanford to connect the East Coast to the West in 1869
The Women Who Waged War Against Sex Trafficking in San Francisco
“The White Devil’s Daughters” examines the enslavement of Chinese women in the late-19th century and how it was defeated
Celebrate the 150th Anniversary of the Transcontinental Railroad by Sleeping in a Train Car
These authentic cabooses, mail cars and train cars from U.S. railways have been converted to sleeping quarters for train fanatics
The Paraglider That NASA Could Have Used, but Didn’t, to Bring Astronauts Back to Earth
Francis Rogallo’s invention would have brought returning space vehicles in for a runway landing, instead of an ocean splashdown
The Transcontinental Railroad Wouldn’t Have Been Built Without the Hard Work of Chinese Laborers
A new exhibit at the National Museum of American History details this underexamined history
Recounting the Untold History of the Early Midwestern Pioneers
In his new book, historian David McCullough reveals how the New England settlers made their mark on the U.S.
Nine Women’s History Exhibits to See This Year
Museums around the country are celebrating how the contributions of remarkable women changed everything from human rights to mariachi music
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