In Another Giant Leap, Apollo 11 Command Module Is 3-D Digitized for Humankind
Five decades after Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins journeyed to the moon, their spaceship finds a new digital life
The History of the Christmas Card
Borne out of having too little time, the holiday greeting has boomed into a major industry
The Day a Bunch of Billionaires Stopped by the Smithsonian
A new effort to study the history of philanthropy is announced and a number of significant charitable contributions are recognized
The ‘Charlie Brown Christmas’ Special Was the Flop That Wasn’t
In 1965, CBS gambled big on an animated spectacular that’s now become a holiday tradition
Protecting Arizona’s Petrified Forest Can Be as Easy as Taking a Hike
After dispelling myths about vandals and thieves, rangers are working to make this national park more open and engaging
Did Climate Change Make the Norse Disappear From Greenland?
Evidence from glacial deposits adds a new twist to the tale of the mysterious lost settlements
A Brief History of Sending a Letter to Santa
Dating back more than 150 years, the practice of writing to St. Nick tells a broader history of America itself
An Intern Saved a Museum by Finding This Revolutionary War Treasure in the Attic
The obvious lesson: never throw anything away
Your Thanksgiving Turkey Is a Quintessentially American Bird: An Immigrant
The turkeys common on U.S. tables descended from a Mexican species and were originally bred for Maya rituals
Smithsonian Journeys Travel Quarterly: Venice
The Old-World Charm of Venice’s Windy Sister City
On the Adriatic island of Korčula, where Venice once ruled, ancient habits and attitudes persist—including a tendency toward blissful indolence
The Unceasing American Quest to Build a Better Mousetrap
There has always been some truth to the apocryphal Emerson quote
Get Reintroduced to Rosa Parks as a New Archive Reveals the Woman Behind the Boycott
The Rosa Parks collection adds depth to the story of the civil rights heroine
How Nantucket Came to Be the Whaling Capital of the World
Ron Howard’s new film “In the Heart of the Sea” captures the greed and blood lust of the Massachusetts island
The U.S. Government Turned Away Thousands of Jewish Refugees, Fearing That They Were Nazi Spies
In a long tradition of “persecuting the refugee,” the State Department and FDR claimed that Jewish immigrants could threaten national security
The Origins of the World War I Agreement That Carved Up the Middle East
How Great Britain and France secretly negotiated the Sykes-Picot Agreement
Rare Interviews With Hitler’s Inner Circle Reveal What Truly Happened on “The Day Hitler Died”
Broadcast for the first time in the U.S., these exclusive clips from a Smithsonian Channel program feature recently unearthed archival footage
Genetic Tweaks Are Revealing the Dinosaur Traits in Living Chickens
A Yale paleontologist is blending fossil studies and bird genes to trace the ways dinosaurs transformed into today’s feathered flocks
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