Four Weird Ways Dogs Have Earned Their Keep
From pulling milk carts to herding reindeer, dogs have had some odd jobs
The Making of the Modern American Recipe
Scientific methods, rising literacy and an increasingly mobile society were key ingredients for a culinary revolution
Children Used to Learn About Death and Damnation With Their ABCs
In 19th-century New England, the books that taught kids how to read had a Puritanical morbidity to them
There Never Was a Real Tulip Fever
A new movie sets its doomed entrepreneurs amidst 17th-century “tulipmania”—but historians of the phenomenon have their own bubble to burst
When the Idea of Home Was Key to American Identity
From log cabins to Gilded Age mansions, how you lived determined where you belonged
Turn-of-the-Century Kid’s Books Taught Wealthy, White Boys the Virtues of Playing Football
A founder of the NCAA, Walter Camp thought that sport was the cure for the social anxiety facing parents in America’s upper class
At an Army Base in Kansas, There’s a Secret Collection of Incredible Finds
Are these priceless artifacts or worthless trinkets? No one knows for sure, but a local art gallery is pitching in to find out
What Does the Gender Reveal Fad Say About Modern Pregnancy?
A new ritual speaks to anxieties surrounding the medicalization of childbearing
How Agriculture Came to Be a Political Weapon—And What That Means for Farmers
In his new book, Ted Genoways follows a family farm and the ways they’re impacted by geopolitics
The year the first enslaved Africans were brought to Jamestown is drilled into students’ memories, but overemphasizing this date distorts history
Five Architects on the One Building They Wish Had Been Preserved
From an elegant solution to urban density to a magnificent financial hub
We Legitimize the ‘So-Called’ Confederacy With Our Vocabulary, and That’s a Problem
Tearing down monuments is only the beginning to understanding the false narrative of Jim Crow
The Jane Austen £10 Note Extends the “Ladylike” History of British Money
The beloved novelist is the latest icon in the Bank of England’s long—and fraught—tradition of gendering finance
This Replica of a Tlingit Killer Whale Hat Is Spurring Dialogue About Digitization
Collaboration between museums and indigenous groups provides educational opportunities, archival documentation—and ethical dilemmas
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