The Heiress to a Gun Empire Built a Mansion Forever Haunted by the Blood Money That Built It
Sarah Winchester inherited a fortune and used it to construct a mysterious mansion in northern California
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Alaska
Tracing Alaska’s Russian Heritage
From onion domes to tsarist-era Russian dialects, evidence of the Russian colonialism remains
Which Great American Should Be Immortalized With the Next Big Broadway Musical?
Hamilton has caught the nation’s attention. A panel of Smithsonian writers and curators suggest who’s next.
The Forgotten Jewish Pirates of Jamaica
Today, some tour operators and cultural historians are calling attention to the country’s little-known Jewish heritage
Lady Bird Johnson Wielded Power With a Delicate Touch
The First Lady was a trailblazer who flew under the radar as a quiet champion of Civil Rights and protecting the environment
The NOW Button Takes Us Back When Women’s Equality Was a Novelty
At the half-century mark, for the National Organization for Women it is still personal—and political
Readers on July 4, 1915 learned the story of a would-be assassin who said he was trying to keep the U.S. out of the European conflict
Where’s the Debate on Francis Scott Key’s Slave-Holding Legacy?
During his lifetime, abolitionists ridiculed Key’s words, sneering that America was more like the “Land of the Free and Home of the Oppressed”
The Origin of the Coney Island Hot Dog Is a Uniquely American Story
They also have very little to do with the New York City amusement park
These Abandoned Buildings Are the Last Remnants of Liberia’s Founding History
The world created by former slaves in Liberia was a cruel paradox for more than 150 years
Photographer Daniella Zalcman explores how native populations had a new nation foisted upon them
A series of three photo essays explores how America has treated its own people in times of crisis
A Bold New History of the Battle of the Somme
British generals have long been seen as the bunglers of the deadly conflict, but a revisionist look argues that a U.S. general was the real donkey
History Forgot This Rogue Aristocrat Who Discovered Dinosaurs and Died Penniless
Now fallen into shadow, the Romania-born Baron Franz Nopcsa was a groundbreaking scientist, adventurer — and would-be king
A Portrait of an American Hero and a Generation That Is Slowly Fading Away
Photographer Dan Winters shows us the modern-day life of an unheralded World War II veteran
The Discovery of a Roman Gladiator School Brings the Famed Fighters Back to Life
Located in Austria, the archaeological site is providing rich new details about the lives and deaths of the arena combatants
The Surprising History of the Infographic
Early iterations saved soldiers’ lives, debunked myths about slavery and helped Americans settle the frontier
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