The Laptops That Powered the American Revolution
Always on the go, the Founding Fathers waged their war of words from the mahogany mobile devices of their time
The FBI was confounded by mysterious letters sent to South America, until they came across New York City proprieter Velvalee Dickinson
Ben Franklin Was One-Fifth Revolutionary, Four-Fifths London Intellectual
The enterprising Philadelphian was late to adopt the revolutionary cause, but infused America with English ideals
Upton Sinclair Was a Socialist Candidate Who Succeeded Through Failure
The author’s 1934 bid to govern California came up short, but left a lasting mark on politics
A Sports Curator at the Smithsonian Unpacks the Myths and Reality in the Film “Race”
Jesse Owens is best known for his performance at the 1936 Berlin Games, but curator Damion Thomas says there is more to the story
The Broadway Revival of “Fiddler” Offers a Profound Reaction to Today’s Refugee Crisis
Popular musicals on Broadway are regarded as escapist, but the worldwide issue of migration and displacement is inescapable
Why Elizabeth Hamilton Is Deserving of a Musical of Her Own
How the founding father’s wife kept their love alive in the face of tragedy
A massive collection of campaign materials dating from 1789 reveals that little has changed in how America shows its affection for their candidate
How the Gold Rush Led to Real Riches in Bird Poop
The ships carrying gold miners to California found a way to strike it rich on the way back with their holds full of guano
The True Story of the ‘Free State of Jones’
A new Hollywood movie looks at the tale of the Mississippi farmer who led a revolt against the Confederacy
The Heroic Effort to Digitally Reconstruct Lost Monuments
Scholars create a virtual archive of antiquities destroyed by extremists in Syria and Iraq
Is the Earthworm Native to the United States and More Questions From Readers
You asked, we answered
Crash Courses Prepare Art Conservators for Catastrophic Disasters
Smithsonian experts train a brave band of conservators in northern Iraq to brace buildings and rescue artifacts in a hurry
Texting Isn’t the First New Technology Thought to Impair Social Skills
When Alexander Graham Bell introduced the telephone, skeptics worried about how it might affect people’s interactions
How a German Archaeologist Rediscovered in Iran the Tomb of Cyrus
Lost for centuries, the royal capital of the Achaemenid Empire was finally confirmed by Ernst Herzfeld
The Race to Save Syria’s Archaeological Treasures
The deliberate destruction of antiquities by ISIS and others in the birthplace of human civilization is cultural genocide
How 43 Giant, Crumbling Presidential Heads Ended Up in a Virginia Field
After an ambitious monument went bust, big dreams—and big heads—remain
Podcast: Farming Shaped the Rise and Fall of Empires in Cambodia
Beneath the country’s troubled history with the Khmer Rouge lies a complex agricultural legacy that reaches back centuries
The First Children Who Led Sad Lives
Several children of presidents met cruel fates in the first 150 years of our country’s history
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