1968: The Year That Shattered America
How the Fourth of July Was Celebrated (and Protested) in 1968
Headlines from The New York Times reveal how the nation and the world commemorated Independence Day in what had already been a tumultuous year
What the 2026 World Cup Could Do for America’s 250th Birthday Celebration
In eight years, the soccer tournament will come to the U.S. just as we mark a major anniversary, providing an opportunity that can’t be missed
The Visionary John Wesley Powell Had a Plan for Developing the West, But Nobody Listened
Powell’s foresight might have prevented the 1930s dust bowl and perhaps, today’s water scarcities
For His Patriotic Birthday, Five Facts About Calvin Coolidge
On Coolidge’s would-be 146th birthday, celebrate with some little-known facts about our 30th President
Racism Kept Connecticut’s Beaches White Up Through the 1970s
By bussing black kids from Hartford to the shore, Ned Coll took a stand against the bigotry of “armchair liberals”
The Adventurous Writer Who Brought Nancy Drew To Life
Mildred Wirt Benson helped invent the fictional teen sleuth who became a generational role model
Let Us Tell You S’more About America’s Favorite Campfire Treat
The gooey snack became popular thanks to technological advances of the Industrial Revolution, which brought cheap sweets to the masses
The American Revolution Was Just One Battlefront in a Huge World War
A new Smithsonian exhibition examines the global context that bolstered the colonists’ fight for independence
Meet the Americans Following in the Footsteps of the Knights Templar
Disbanded 700 years ago, the most famous of the medieval Christian orders is undergoing a 21st century revival
A strange and bittersweet ballad of kidnapping, stolen identity and unlikely stardom
The Epic Quest to Ride the World’s Biggest Wave
Welcome to the new Mt. Everest of surfing, a notoriously dangerous break off the coast of Portugal
This French Town Has Welcomed Refugees for 400 Years
For centuries, the people of the mountain village of Chambon-sur-Lignon have opened their arms to the world’s displaced
Pushed to the Margins, These Brave People Are Pushing Back
From the American West to the Middle East, the powerless face stark choices when confronted by the powerful
The Slow Recovery in Puerto Rico
As the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Maria approaches, Puerto Ricans feel not only devastated but abandoned
Identity Crisis: Three Photo Essays Highlight the Lives of the Dispossessed
In our chaotic era, there are outcasts—and people who take them in
The True Story of ‘A Very English Scandal’ and the Trials of a Closeted Gay Politician
The new series about 1970s British MP Jeremy Thorpe traces his rise to power, then dramatic fall, complete with charges of a conspiracy to murder
Fifty Years Ago, Airline Diplomacy Sought to Bring the U.S. and U.S.S.R. Closer Together
Hopes for a Cold War détente were sky high when the first American and Soviet flights took off 50 years ago
The Preservation Battle of Grand Central
Forty years ago, preservationists—including a former First Lady—fought to maintain the integrity of New York City’s historic railway station
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