When the British Wanted to Camouflage Their Warships, They Made Them Dazzle
In order to stop the carnage wrought by German U-Boats, the Allied powers went way outside the box
Remembering Dr. Joe Medicine Crow
He showed us we are capable of great things when we look within ourselves, says scholar Nina Sanders
A Show of Over 6,000 Orchids Celebrates a Victorian-Era Obsession
Succumb to “Orchidelirium” at The New York Botanical Garden
A new museum offers a rebuke — and an antidote — to our sanitized history of slavery
Andrew Jackson, America’s Original Anti-Establishment Candidate
The seventh president raged against many of the same machines that are now engulfing this year’s election
“Driving While Black” Has Been Around As Long As Cars Have Existed
Documentarian Ric Burns talks about his forthcoming film about the “Green Book” and other travel guides for African-Americans
When Newspapers Reported on Gun Deaths as “Melancholy Accidents”
A historian explains how a curious phrase used by the American press caught his eye and became the inspiration for his new book
For Susan B. Anthony, Getting Support for Her ‘Revolution’ Meant Taking on an Unusual Ally
Suffragists Anthony and Cady Stanton found common cause in a wealthy man named George Francis Train who helped to fund their newspaper
A New Addition to #MyDaguerreotypeBoyfriend Is the Civil War’s Most Daring Naval Officer
Who is this cool cat, posing for an unusually casual photo for famed photographer Alexander Gardner?
Deep in the jungles of southeast Asia, archaeologists have rediscovered the remains of an invisible kingdom that may have been the template for Angkor Wat
A Brief History of the Zoot Suit
Unraveling the jazzy life of a snazzy style
How the Green Book Helped African-American Tourists Navigate a Segregated Nation
Listing hotels, restaurants and other businesses open to African-Americans, the guide was invaluable for Jim-Crow era travelers
The “Sistine Chapel of Evolution” Is in New Haven, Connecticut
Charles Darwin never visited the Yale museum, but you can, and see for yourself the specimens that he praised as the best evidence for his theory
How Much Has the Town Where the Scopes Trial Took Place Evolved Since the 1920s?
Each July, Dayton, Tennessee, celebrates its role in the famous court case with a re-enactment and festival
Even a century later, the news has brought relief to the families of the sailors who went down with their ship
Take A Trip Through 300 Years of Men’s Fashion
At the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, a new exhibition highlights 200 styles, from military uniforms to punk jackets
The Grand Coulee Powers On, 75 Years After Its First Surge of Electricity
A look back at how the powerful dam came to be
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