This South Carolina Cabin Is Now a Crown Jewel in the Smithsonian Collections
The 16- by 20-foot dwelling once housed the enslaved; a new podcast tells its story
Ritual Cemeteries—For Cows and Then Humans—Plot Pastoralist Expansion Across Africa
As early herders spread across northern and then eastern Africa, the communities erected monumental graves which may have served as social gathering points
2018 Smithsonian Ingenuity Awards
Why John Leguizamo Is So Invested in Telling the Country About Latino History
His uproariously inventive one-man show, soon to be shown on Netflix, puts the story of a neglected culture center stage
The Malbone Street Wreck of 1918
A confluence of circumstances led to the deadly disaster, 100 years ago today, in the New York subway that killed 93
The Nazi Werewolves Who Terrorized Allied Soldiers at the End of WWII
Though the guerrilla fighters didn’t succeed in slowing the Allied occupation of Germany, they did sow fear wherever they went
Scientists Extract DNA From Seabiscuit’s Hooves To Figure Out How He Was So Fast
Eighty years ago, the horse famously trounced Triple Crown winner War Admiral. Did genetics make him an unlikely success?
Why Museums Should Be Proud Polling Sites
The head of the Benjamin Harrison Presidential Site calls upon his colleagues to engage with their community by opening their doors to voting
Judy and Dennis Shepard lay their son to rest at the Washington National Cathedral after donating childhood artwork, photos and a wedding ring
People Feared Being Buried Alive So Much They Invented These Special Safety Coffins
For centuries, inventors have been patenting technology to prevent such a nightmare from happening
A New Museum Honoring America’s Veterans Opens in Ohio
Personal stories take the place of military artifacts at the new National Veterans Memorial & Museum
The Deadly Donora Smog of 1948 Spurred Environmental Protection—But Have We Forgotten the Lesson?
Steel and zinc industries provided Donora residents with work, but also robbed them of their health, and for some, their lives
In Need of Cadavers, 19th-Century Medical Students Raided Baltimore’s Graves
With a half-dozen medical schools and a shortage of bodies, grave robbing thrived—and with no consequences for the culprits
What Ancient Maize Can Tell Us About Thousands of Years of Civilization in America
It took millennia, but America’s founding farmers developed the grain that would fuel civilizations—and still does
The Court Case That Inspired the Gilded Age’s #MeToo Moment
A turn-of-the-century trial, the focus of a new book, took aim at the Victorian double standard
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
The Translator Who Brought a Lost Jewish Poet’s Words to the English-Speaking World
Raised in the U.S. but a lifelong speaker of Lithuanian, Laima Vince became enamored of Matilda Olkin’s writing
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
Why did we turn an isolated teenage girl into the world’s most famous Holocaust victim?
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
The Words of a Young Jewish Poet Provoke Soul-Searching in Lithuania
The recovery of a diary written by a brilliant woman named Matilda Olkin raises trenchant questions about wartime collaboration
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
Two newly translated diaries by young women murdered in the Holocaust cry out to us about the evils of the past and the dangers of the present
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
An 18-year-old girl, terrorized by the Nazis, kept a secret journal. Read exclusive sections from it here, presented in English for the first time
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
The Searing, Continued Relevance of Diaries From a Genocide
Young people caught in the crossfire of history provide fearless accounts of the horrors of war—and shatter our complacency in real time
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