The chief of the FBI’s organized crime unit on the history of La Cosa Nostra
Mythology, propaganda, Liz Taylor and the real Queen of the Nile
Though they embrace computers and TV, the secret of the tribe’s unity lies in fealty to their past
The Proceedings of the Old Bailey is an epic chronicle of crime and vice in early London. Now anyone can search all 52 million words
Momentous or Merely Memorable
Virginia Morell, author of “The Zuni Way,” on the mystical ceremonies of the Zuni pueblo
Duke Ellington, animated movies and the old ballgame
The Algonquian settlement crucial to the survival of Jamestown 400 years ago has been found. Finally
A photographic essay of how women won the vote
On March 17, everyone’s green-even the Chicago River. Yet St. Patrick remains colored in myth
In this interview, Ernest “Pat” Furgurson, author of “Catching Up with ‘Old Slow Trot,’” says some people are still fighting the Civil War
The Stranger and the Statesman
An excerpt from Nina Burleigh’s book, The Stranger and the Statesman: James Smithson, John Quincy Adams, and the Making of America’s Greatest Museum
Why This Wealthy British Scientist Saw So Much Potential in the United States of America
James Smithson’s biographer offers insight into ideals born of the Age of Enlightenment that gave rise to the founding of the Smithsonian
Historians’ perspectives on George H. Thomas
Momentous or Merely Memorable
Catching Up With “Old Slow Trot”
Stubborn and deliberate, General George Henry Thomas was one of the Union’s most brilliant strategists. So why was he cheated by history?
A new biography depicts benefactor James Smithson as an exuberant, progressive man enamored of science
Rebels by any name
Rediscover five articles published between May 2002 and May 2006 that reveal another side of the emerging superpower
A new series of commemorative coins honors presidential spouses whose achievements have long been overlooked
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