Would the Legendary Babe Ruth Still Be a Star if He Played Today?
Award-winning sportswriter Jane Leavy says the Bambino would be as big a personality as he was in his own time
Learn the Secret History of Your State With These Addictive Podcasts
Use this indispensable guide to find out which podcast will be next on your listen list
Why Mount Fuji Endures As a Powerful Force in Japan
Not even crowds and the threat of an eruption can dampen the eternally mysterious volcano
How the Mustang, the Symbol of the Frontier, Became a Nuisance
A mainstay of Western culture, the free-roaming stallions are now a force to be reckoned with
The Debate Over Executive Orders Began With Teddy Roosevelt’s Mad Passion for Conservation
Teddy used nearly 10 times as many executive orders as his predecessor. The repercussions are still felt today
Reports on the Death of the Circus Have Been Greatly Exaggerated
Celebrating the arts, business, history and culture of the circus, the Smithsonian Folklife Festival brings 400 performers to the National Mall this summer
In a Czar-less Russia, Winning Was Easy. Governing Was Harder.
Now without a sovereign, Russia’s provisional government sought to maintain peace at home while waging a world war
These 20th-Century Technologists Sure Knew How to Throw a Party
To mark the centennial of the American Patent System in 1936, a group of innovators gathered to throw a deliciously creative celebration
The Swashbuckling History of Women Pirates
When women roamed the high seas in search of fortune, freedom, and sometimes revenge
The Women Who Fried Donuts and Dodged Bombs on the Front Lines of WWI
Even if they had to use shell casings as rolling pins, the donuts still got made
Why Are We So Obsessed With Dead Bodies?
Body Worlds taps into a long, fraught history of humans displaying the deceased for “science”
A Smithsonian Historian Wanders the “Bardo,” Exploring the Spiritual World of the 19th Century
George Saunders’ new novel, “Lincoln in the Bardo” recalls the melancholy that hung over a nation at war
The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 Laid Bare the Divide Between the North and the South
The 1927 disaster exposed a country divided by stereotypes and united by modernity
How Director James Gray Discovered the Insanity Behind the Search for “The Lost City of Z”
A story of Victorian-age madness and exploration in the South American jungle is coming to a theater near you
Why Teddy Roosevelt Tried to Bully His Way Onto the WWI Battlefield
Tensions ran high when President Wilson quashed the return of the former president’s Rough Riders
Why Is the Pentagon a Pentagon?
Planners battled to ensure the building kept its unique shape
The Mystery of Roanoke Endures Yet Another Cruel Twist
An artifact found 20 years ago turns out to not be what archaeologists thought
World War I Letters From Generals to Doughboys Voice the Sorrow of Fighting a War
An exhibition at the National Postal Museum displays a rare letter from General John Pershing
These Powerful Posters Persuaded Americans It Was Time to Join the Fight
The Smithsonian offers a rare opportunity to see an original iconic Uncle Sam “I Want You” poster, among others, of the World War I era
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