Inside the Alluring Power of Public Opinion Polls From Elections Past
A digital-savvy historian discusses his popular @HistOpinion Twitter account
Thousands Converge on the National Mall For Music, Family, Remembrance and Celebration
Families from all over the country arrive to celebrate the grand opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture
Why Do We Still Have Morse Code and More Questions From Our Readers
You asked, we answer
What Langston Hughes’ Powerful Poem “I, Too” Tells Us About America’s Past and Present
Smithsonian historian David Ward reflects on the work of Langston Hughes
Historic Bell Helps Ring in New African American History Museum
Why President Obama won’t cut a ribbon when the new museum opens this Saturday
How Cuba Remembers Its Revolutionary Past and Present
On the 60th anniversary of Fidel Castro’s secret landing on Cuba’s southern shore, our man in Havana journeys into the island’s rebel heart
Myth and Reason on the Mexican Border
The renowned travel writer journeys the length of the U.S.-Mexico border to get a firsthand look at life along the blurry 2,000-mile line
A Mural on View in the African American History Museum Recalls the Rise of Resurrection City
The 1968 Hunger Wall is a stark reminder of the days when the country’s impoverished built a shantytown on the National Mall
How the Heated, Divisive Election of 1800 Was the First Real Test of American Democracy
A banner from the Smithsonian collections lays out the stakes of Jefferson vs. Adams
The Sordid History of Mount Rushmore
The sculptor behind the American landmark had some unseemly ties to white supremacy groups
The Founder of the Smithsonian Institution Figured Out How to Brew a Better Cup of Coffee
Almost two hundred years ago, James Smithson devised a method for better brewing. We recreated it.
Even When He Was in His 20s, Winston Churchill Was Already on the Verge of Greatness
The future Prime Minister became known throughout Britain for his travails as a journalist during the Boer War
Photographer Nish Nalbandian on Bearing Witness to the Violence in the Syrian Civil War
In a new book, “A Whole World Blind,” the American photographer documents the tragedy in the Middle East
Visit the Site of the Biggest Witch Trial in History
Over 7,000 people were accused of witchcraft in Basque Spain
How Should South Africa Remember the Architect of Apartheid?
Fifty years after H.F. Verwoerd was assassinated in Parliament, the nation he once presided over reckons with its past
Nat Turner’s Bible Gave the Enslaved Rebel the Resolve to Rise Up
A Bible belonging to the enslaved Turner spoke of possibility says curator Rex Ellis of the National Museum of African American History and Culture
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