This Mobster Museum Was Once One of New York City’s Most Notorious Speakeasies
See shell casings from Bonnie and Clyde’s final shoot out and John Dillinger’s death mask in the Museum of the American Gangster’s unusual collection
Why Robert Redford Loves America’s National Parks
The famed actor and director celebrates the great outdoors of the United States in a new documentary
A Journey to the Oldest Cave Paintings in the World
The discovery in a remote part of Indonesia has scholars rethinking the origins of art—and of humanity
The Early History of Autism in America
A surprising new historical analysis suggests that a pioneering doctor was examining people with autism before the Civil War
There Are Still Thousands of Tons of Unexploded Bombs in Germany, Left Over From World War II
More than 70 years after being dropped in Europe, the ordnance is still inflicting harm and mayhem
How “The Sound of Silence” Became a Surprise Hit
The Simon and Garfunkel song catapulted the duo to stardom
The History of the United States’ First Refugee Crisis
Fleeing the Haitian revolution, whites and free blacks were viewed with suspicion by American slaveholders, including Thomas Jefferson
How Are Horoscopes Still a Thing?
No, there’s no science behind an astrologer’s prediction for 2016, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be accurate
From Hitler’s home videos to the suffocating upbringing of an American princess, here are the most-watched videos on Smithsonian.com this year
Tiny Fossils Reveal the Rise of Mammals on Madagascar
Recent finds are helping paleontologists piece together what happened after dinosaurs vanished from the island
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Venice
The Enduring Mystique of the Venetian Lagoon
Among islands barely emerging from the water, you find yourself in an ageless world
From treasures buried in glaciers to the racial history of a vanished city in Oregon, here are the most-read stories on Smithsonian.com this year
The Best History Books of 2015
Beyond the boldface names are these chronicles from the past year that are well worth your time
American Children Faced Great Dangers in the 1930s, None Greater Than “Little Orphan Annie”
Advertisements for Ovaltine were just part of the problem
Surprising archaeological finds are breaking new ground in our understanding of Jesus’s time—and the revolution he launched 2,000 years ago
How the African American History Museum Is Curating “Black Lives Matter”
Photographs, posters and other artifacts documenting the protests find a home at the new Smithsonian museum
What Killed These Marine Reptiles Found in a Nevada Ghost Town?
Paleontologists are going high tech to solve the mystery of a mass ichthyosaur death near the old mining town of Berlin
Page 189 of 300