How the 1918 Flu Pandemic Helped Advance Women’s Rights
While the virus disproportionately affected young men, women stepped into public roles that hadn’t previously been open to them
The 1968 Kerner Commission Got It Right, But Nobody Listened
Released 50 years ago, the infamous report found that poverty and institutional racism were driving inner-city violence
During World War I, Many Women Served and Some Got Equal Pay
Remembering the aspirations, struggles and accomplishments of women who served a century ago
Women Who Shape History: Education Resources
For use in the classroom or your community, a list of lesson plans and other teaching materials on women’s history in America
The Woman Who Shaped the Study of Fossil Brains
By drawing out hidden connections, Tilly Edinger joined the fields of geology and neurology
Collecting the stories of women who forever changed the course of the American story
Why We Need to Start Building Monuments to Groundbreaking Women
The brilliant female codebreakers of WWII were forgotten to history, but would that have happened had they been recognized with the same fervor as men?
A Classic American Cheerleading Troupe Tumbles to Smithsonian Immortality
“America’s Sweethearts” are as dedicated to social service as they are to the Dallas Cowboys
There’s Great Drama Within the Truths of “The Looming Tower”
How filmmaker Alex Gibney brought a documentarian’s eye to the story of the 9/11 attacks
Fifty Years Ago, a Grad Student’s Discovery Changed the Course of Astrophysics
By identifying the first pulsars, Jocelyn Bell Burnell set the stage for discoveries in black holes and gravitational waves
Will a New Law Forever Change the German Language?
When a language is strongly gendered, it can raise all sorts of challenges to a society that’s increasingly accepting of a wide spectrum of identities
How a Sneak Attack By Norway’s Skiing Soldiers Deprived the Nazis of the Atomic Bomb
Seventy-five years ago, in Operation Gunnerside, a stealthy group of commandos took out a crucial Nazi chemical plant
How U.S. and German Art Experts Are Teaming Up to Solve Nazi-Era Mysteries
Specialists in WWII art loss and restitution discuss provenance research
The Political Circus and Constitutional Crisis of Andrew Johnson’s Impeachment
When the 17th president was accused of high crimes and misdemeanors in 1868, the wild trial nearly reignited the Civil War
When Emancipation Finally Came, Slave Markets Took on a Redemptive Purpose
During the Civil War, the jails that held the enslaved imprisoned Confederate soldiers. After, they became rallying points for a newly empowered community
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