What Frankenstein Can Still Teach Us 200 Years Later
An innovative annotated edition of the novel shows how the Mary Shelley classic has many lessons about the danger of unchecked innovation
The Proliferation of Happiness
A professor of consumer culture tracks the history of positive psychology
How Do We Restore Trust in Our Democracies?
Museums can be a starting point, says David J. Skorton, the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution
Newspapers reported that cowgirl Ella Watson was a no-good thief who deserved the vigilante killing that befell her, when in reality she was anything but
How I Learned About the “Cult of the Lost Cause”
The mayor of New Orleans offers his reading list for anyone looking to better understand the real history of Confederate monuments
Buckle Up, History Nerds — “Timeless” Is Back and As Usual, Gets the Facts Mostly Right
In a new editorial series, we recap the NBC show that puts a new twist on American history
How the African-American Syphax Family Traces Its Lineage to Martha Washington
Resources at the African American History Museum deliver a wealth of opportunity for genealogical research
The dime novels and story papers entertained boys and launched a popular culture we still consume today
One Hundred Years Later, the Madness of Daylight Saving Time Endures
The original arguments Congress made for ‘springing ahead’ have been thoroughly debunked. So why are they still being used today?
These Photos Captured What Happened When the United States Started to Ration Shoes During WWII
Seventy-five years ago, the Office for Price Administration wanted to limit the use of leather on the homefront
York Explored the West With Lewis and Clark, but His Freedom Wouldn’t Come Until Decades Later
In some ways, he encountered a world unavailable to the enslaved. But in others, the journey was rife with danger and degradation
The Sightless Visionary Who Invented Cruise Control
Self-driving cars were far from Ralph Teetor’s mind when he patented his speed control device
This Historic Gavel Hammers Home the Achievements of Nancy Pelosi… and the United States
The congresswoman donates to the Smithsonian artifacts tied to her first day as Speaker of the House in 2007
The International Vision of John Willis Menard, First African-American Elected to Congress
Although he was denied his seat in the House, Menard continued his political activism with the goal of uniting people across the Western Hemisphere
How Native American Slaveholders Complicate the Trail of Tears Narrative
The new exhibition ‘Americans’ at the National Museum of the American Indian prompts a deeper dive for historic truths
Two Museum Directors Say It’s Time to Tell the Unvarnished History of the U.S.
History isn’t pretty and sometimes it is vastly different than what we’ve been taught, say Lonnie Bunch and Kevin Gover
The Hidden History of Anna Murray Douglass
Although she’s often overshadowed by her husband, Frederick Douglass, Anna made his work possible
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