Eunice Foote’s career highlights the subtle forms of discrimination that have kept women on the sidelines of science
Military personnel weren’t the only people attacked on December 7, 1941
Chief Justice, Not President, Was William Howard Taft’s Dream Job
The 27th president arguably left a more lasting mark on the nation as leader of the Supreme Court
The Best Books About Food of 2016
Looking for the perfect gift for the food lover in your life? Any of these suggestions will hit the spot
A Rare Insider’s View of Native American Life in Mid-20th-Century Oklahoma
Horace Poolaw’s photography is unearthed at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian
What You Need to Know First to Understand the Russian Revolution
Read this first in a series of columns chronicling what led to that 1917 cataclysm
How Accurate Is the Movie “Allied”?
The best spies won’t leave behind an evidence trail, but then how will audiences know what’s true and what’s fiction?
Where Did Harriet Tubman Escape to and More Questions From Our Readers
You asked, we answered
A Photographic Chronicle of America’s Working Poor
Smithsonian journeyed from Maine to California to update a landmark study of American life
How (Almost) Everyone Failed to Prepare for Pearl Harbor
The high-stakes gamble and false assumptions that detonated Pearl Harbor 80 years ago
The Christmas Tale Spoken Record That Launched the Audiobook
Narrated by Dylan Thomas, the album would go on to sell 400,000 copies
Untangling the History of Christmas Lights
This bright idea was ahead of its time
Mystery Solved: A Michigan Woman Says She Mailed Civil War Letters to the Post Office
Smithsonian curator Nancy Pope learns how and why these letters showed up in the mail 153 years later
A Smithsonian Scholar Revisits the Neglected History of the Chesapeake Bay’s Native Tribes
Revisiting Indian Nations of the Chesapeake
The Plymouth Hero You Should Really Be Thankful for This Thanksgiving
Without Edward Winslow, we probably wouldn’t even be celebrating the holiday
New Book Clarifies Butter’s Spread and Chronicles Its Wars With Margarine
The story of milk agitated into greatness
This Photo Book Is a Reminder That the Civil Rights Movement Extended Far Beyond the Deep South
Public historian Mark Speltz’s new book is full of images that aren’t typically part of the 1960s narrative
Space Archaeologist Sarah Parcak Uses Satellites to Uncover Ancient Egyptian Ruins
The Indiana Jones of low Earth orbit harnesses 21st-century technology to uncover long-buried treasures
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