Mark Bradford’s Paintings Scratch at the Surface of a Conflicted America
The Hirshhorn Museum hosts the artist’s first solo show in Washington
What Was the Inspiration for “The Murder on the Orient Express”?
Agatha Christie wrote her famous detective novel based on an even more famous kidnapping
In 1887, African-American cane workers in Louisiana attempted to organize—and many paid with their lives
The recordings we hear today didn’t air over the BBC at the time, but that hasn’t stopped many Britons from remembering otherwise
A Brief History of “Alice’s Restaurant”
The Arlo Guthrie classic starts off retelling the true story of what happened more than 50 years ago
Thirteen Books That Informed and Delighted Smithsonian Scholars This Year
With a mission to increase and diffuse knowledge, Smithsonian thought leaders are voracious readers
Before the Fall of the Roman Republic, Income Inequality and Xenophobia Threatened Its Foundations
In a new book, history podcaster Mike Duncan describes what preceded Caesar’s rise to Emperor
The Invisible Face of the American Worker Is Made Stunningly Visible in This New Show
The National Portrait Gallery kicks off its 50th anniversary with the exhibition “The Sweat of Their Face”
Can the Museum of the Bible Deliver on Its Promise?
The highly anticipated museum hopes to offer something for visitors of all faiths, but on a topic as fraught as religion, that may not be possible
A 1957 Meeting Forced the FBI to Recognize the Mafia—And Changed the Justice System Forever
FBI director J. Edgar Hoover previously ignored the growing threat in favor of pursuing Cold War bugaboos
Why Did the 1918 Flu Kill So Many Otherwise Healthy Young Adults?
Uncovering a World War I veteran’s story provided a genealogist and pharmacologist with some clues
Lonnie Bunch Looks Back on the Making of the Smithsonian’s Newest Museum
The director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture reflects on what it took to make a dream reality
The Forgotten Women Scientists Who Fled the Holocaust for the United States
A new project from Northeastern University traces the journeys of 80 women who attempted to escape Europe and find new lives in America during World War II
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