COVID-19 May Permanently Shutter Museum Devoted to Vaccination Pioneer
In an ironic twist, Edward Jenner’s historic house is struggling to outlast the financial toll of being closed
Nine Educational Livestreams Coming From Historical Sites in the United States
Learn about life in the days when diphtheria and smallpox, not COVID-19, were the diseases to fear, and more
How Do American Indians Celebrate Mother’s Day?
In the early 20th century, Native people responded to the proclamation of Mother’s Day with powwows, ceremonies, rodeos, feasts, and songs
The ‘Hard Hat Riot’ of 1970 Pitted Construction Workers Against Anti-War Protesters
The Kent State shootings further widened the chasm among a citizenry divided over the Vietnam War
The Story of Charles Willson Peale’s Massive Mastodon
When a European intellectual snubbed the U.S., the well-known artist excavated the giant fossil as evidence of the new Republic’s strength and power
Shakespearean Stabbings, How to Feed a Dictator and Other New Books to Read
The sixth installment in our weekly series spotlights titles that may have been lost in the news amid the COVID-19 crisis
How 13 Seconds Changed Kent State University Forever
The institution took decades to come to grips with the trauma of the killing of four students 50 years ago
When Babe Ruth and the Great Influenza Gripped Boston
As Babe Ruth was emerging as baseball’s great slugger in 1918, he fell sick with the flu
The Complicated Legacy of Herbert Spencer, the Man Who Coined ‘Survival of the Fittest’
Spencer’s ideas laid the groundwork for social Darwinism, but scholars say there was much more to the Victorian Age thinker than that
Making Tierra Mía, says the director of the Smithsonian Latino Center, proved transformative in giving voice to the people
What Rome Learned From the Deadly Antonine Plague of 165 A.D.
The outbreak was far deadlier than COVID-19, but the empire survived
Six Online Courses About Europe to Take Before You Can Safely Travel There Again
Sheltering in place doesn’t mean you can’t study up for your next European adventure
A 2,000-Year History of Restaurants and Other New Books to Read
The fifth installment in our weekly series spotlights titles that may have been lost in the news amid the COVID-19 crisis
This Pandemic Isn’t the First Time the Hajj Has Been Disrupted for Muslims
Plague, war and politics have altered the yearly pilgrimage to Mecca throughout history
How ‘Social Distancing’ Can Get Lost in Translation
Governments around the world grapple with how to deliver important guidelines on minimizing the spread of COVID-19
Fifty Things We’ve Learned About the Earth Since the First Earth Day
On April 22, 1970, Americans pledged environmental action for the planet. Here’s what scientists and we, the global community, have done since
What an 1836 Typhus Outbreak Taught the Medical World About Epidemics
An American doctor operating out of Philadelphia made clinical observations that where patients lived, not how they lived, was at the root of the problem
The Science of Fear, the Royal Scandal That Made France Modern and Other New Books to Read
The fourth installment in our weekly series spotlights titles that may have been lost in the news amid the COVID-19 crisis
What Made Emmett Ashford, Major League Baseball’s First Black Umpire, an American Hero
During his 20-year professional career, his boisterous style endeared him to fans but rankled traditionalists
Has Anyone Ever Run for President While in Prison? And More Questions From Our Readers
You’ve got questions. We’ve got experts
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