How 18th-Century Writers Created the Genre of Popular Science
French writers such as Voltaire and Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle helped shape the Enlightenment with stories of science
The History of Poisoning the Well
From ancient Mesopotamia to modern-day Iraq, the threat to a region’s water supply is the cruelest cut of all
The Mouthwatering History of Seven Fundamental Foodstuffs
A new Smithsonian book whisks readers on a culinary odyssey, tracing the history of salt, pork, honey, chili, tomato, rice and chocolate
How a Love of Flowers Helped Charles Darwin Validate Natural Selection
Though his voyage to the Galapagos and his work with finches dominate the narrative of the famed naturalist, he was, at heart, a botanist
The Forgotten Story of the American Troops Who Got Caught Up in the Russian Civil War
Even after the armistice was signed ending World War I, the doughboys clashed with Russian forces 100 years ago
The Evolution of the College Dorm Chronicles How Colleges Became Less White and Male
What the architecture and history of student housing tell us about higher education
The Incomplete History Told by New York’s K.G.B. Museum
Designed to be apolitical, the attraction offers whiz-bang tech without the agency’s brutal past
The Pharmacist Who Launched America’s Modern Candy Industry
Oliver Chase invented a lozenge-cutting machine that led to Necco wafers, Sweethearts and the mechanization of candy making
Enslaved Tour Guide Stephen Bishop Made Mammoth Cave the Must-See Destination It Is Today
In the 1830s and ‘40s, the pioneering spelunker mapped out many of the underground system’s most popular spots
How the Grand Canyon Transformed From a ‘Valueless’ Place to a National Park
Before the advent of geology as a science, the canyon was avoided. Now the popular park is celebrating its centennial year
George Washington and I Go Way Back—Or So Goes the Tale of My Family’s Cane
An heirloom is charged with both sentiment and purely speculative history
The legacy left behind by the Philadelphia-based retail chain Wanamaker’s is still felt by shoppers today
What This Jacket Tells Us About the Degrading Treatment of Japanese-Americans During WWII
An exhibit in San Francisco explores the dark chapter in American history when the government imprisoned its own citizens
How First Lady Sarah Polk Set a Model for Conservative Female Power
The popular and pious wife to President James Polk had little use for the nascent suffrage movement
What the Earliest Super Bowl Commercials Tell Us About the Super Bowl
The inaugural title game in 1967 would not have been getting kudos from the media for representing women
Aretha Franklin’s Decades-Old Documentary Finally Comes to Theaters in 2019
The 2019 nationwide release, 47 years after it was made, means audiences at last will see the Queen of Soul’s transcendent masterpiece
The Computer Programmer Who Ran a Global Drug Trafficking Empire
A new book uncovers the intricacies of Paul Le Roux’s cartel and how it fueled the opioid epidemic ravaging the U.S. today
Color TV Transformed the Way Americans Saw the World, and the World Saw America
A historian of 20th century media argues that the technological innovation was the quintessential Cold War machine
Seventy-Five Years Ago, the Television Musical Made Its Debut
“RENT: Live” meet “The Boys from Boise”
When Fidel Castro Charmed the United States
Sixty years ago this month, the romantic victory of the young Cuban revolutionaries amazed the world—and led to a surreal evening on “The Ed Sullivan Show”
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