The Priceless Impact Harriet Tubman Will Have as the Face of the $20 Bill
Curator Nancy Bercaw from the African American History Museum discusses the freedom fighter’s ongoing legacy
Nikola Tesla’s Struggle to Remain Relevant
An offbeat Belgrade museum reveals the many mysteries of the prolific, late-19th-century inventor
‘Unbought and Unbossed’: When a Black Woman Ran for the White House
The congresswoman tried to win the White House by consolidating the Black vote and the women’s vote, but she ran into trouble
Is Bratislava’s Communist-Era Architecture Worth Preserving?
For residents of Slovakia’s capital, Cold War structures recall a painful past
A Member of the Little Rock Nine Discusses Her Struggle to Attend Central High
At 15, Minnijean Brown faced down the Arkansas National Guard, Now Her Story and Personal Items are Archived at the Smithsonian
Celebrating 500 Years of German’s Beer Purity Law
Germany’s treasured—and controversial—rule has a fascinating past and an uncertain future
From user-generated content to political screeds, the future of news happens to look a lot like the past
Why Benedict Arnold Turned Traitor Against the American Revolution
The story behind the most famous betrayal in U.S. history shows the complicated politics of the nation’s earliest days
Who Really Wrote “Citizen Kane”?
Two new books offer divergent theories on the authorship of the much-heralded film
How a Psychedelic Concert Poster Rocked the World
C’mon baby light my flier
An Oral History of “Star Trek”
The trail-blazing sci-fi series debuted 50 years ago and has taken countless fans where none had gone before
Before Reefer Madness, High Times and 4/20, There Was the Marijuana Revenue Stamp
Originally designed in the 1930s to restrict access to the drug, these stamps draw a curious crowd to the Postal Museum
Mystery of the Varna Gold: What Caused These Ancient Societies to Disappear?
Treasure found in prehistoric graves in Bulgaria is the first evidence of social hierarchy, but no one knows what caused the civilization’s decline
How the Danube Became a Multinational Power Source
Spanning 1,770 miles from Germany’s Black Forest to the coast of Romania, the river takes its character from the people and places it passes
How the “Daisy” Ad Changed Everything About Political Advertising
Since the famous television spot ran in 1964, advertising agencies have sold presidential candidates as if they were cars or soap
What Can the Collapse of the Whig Party Tell Us About Today’s Politics?
Is the Republican party on the verge of catastrophe? Probably not, if history is any indicator
Teddy Roosevelt’s Epic (But Strangely Altruistic) Hunt for a White Rhino
In a new book, a Smithsonian naturalist tells the gritty, controversial tale of how one of America’s presidents felled a threatened species
Vintage Photos Recall the Early Days of Hip-Hop, Before It Became a Billion-Dollar Industry
More than 400 images from the 1980s to the early 2000s detail the “standout moments” of the rise of Run DMC, Grandmaster Flash, Jay Z and many more artists
A Science Lecture Accidentally Sparked a Global Craze for Yogurt
More than a century ago, a biologist’s remarks set people searching for yogurt as a cure for old age
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