You Can Still Stay a Night at These Grand Hotels From the Gilded Age
Those that survive today are a testament to Old World luxury
The Evolution of Money, From Feathers to Credit Cards
Coin collectors, and trinket lovers welcome back the National Numismatic Collections to its splendid new gallery at the American History Museum
Take a trip to the uncanny valley and hope you make it back unscathed
How Singer Won the Sewing Machine War
The Singer Sewing Machine changed the way America manufactured textiles, but the invention itself was less important than the company’s innovative business
An Attempt to Keep the Dying Gottschee Culture Very Much Alive
Inspired by a trip to Slovenia with her grandmother, one New Yorker took it upon herself to chronicle the story of a lost piece of European history
Sponsor: National Portrait Gallery
Which of These Baseball Players Should the Portrait Gallery Put on Display?
Vote for these all-stars in an entirely different kind of competition
The Scopes Trial Redefined Science Journalism and Shaped It to What It Is Today
Ninety years ago a Tennessee man stood trial for teaching evolution, a Smithsonian archives collection offers a glimpse into the rich backstory
What Killed the Dinosaurs in Utah’s Giant Jurassic Death Pit?
Paleontologists are gathering evidence that may help crack the 148-million-year-old mystery, including signs of poisoned predators
How Curators Wrestled With the Complex Story of American Business
The broad and sometimes difficult history of business in the U.S., its rogues, heros, successes and failures, is the dynamic story in a new exhibition
How Colonel Sanders Made Kentucky Fried Chicken an American Success Story
A weathervane from the Smithsonian collections is emblematic of Harland Sanders’s decades-long pursuit to make his chicken finger-lickin’ good
How a Hot Dog Eating Contest Became One of the Fourth of July’s Greatest Traditions
Why the American dream is shaped like a hot dog
Bringing Thomas Jefferson’s Battered Tombstone Back to Life
The founding father’s fragile grave marker has survived for centuries, enduring souveniring, a fire and errant repairs
The Great Moon Hoax Was Simply a Sign of Its Time
Scientific discoveries and faraway voyages inspired fantastic tales—and a new Smithsonian exhibition
Past and Presence: The Power of Photographs
The shattering nature of violence. The resilience of the human spirit. The power of photographs. A Smithsonian special project
As children, they escaped ruthless state-sponsored violence. Now, these Armenian women and men visit the aching memory of what they left behind
A Photographic Requiem for America’s Civil War Battlefields
Walking far-flung battlefields to picture the nation’s defining tragedy in a modern light
How did a peace treaty signed — and broken — more than 800 years ago become one of the world’s most influential documents?
There Were Listicles That Went Viral Long Before There Was an Internet
Digital scholars are zeroing in on stories that were trending way back in the 19th century
What’s Changed, and What Hasn’t, in the Town That Inspired ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’
Traveling back in time to visit Harper Lee’s hometown, the setting of her 1960 masterpiece and the controversial sequel hitting bookstores soon
What It’s Like to Travel the Inca Road Today
A rocky rollicking journey to Machu Picchu along one of the greatest engineering feats in the Americas
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