How the Associated Press Got Its Start 175 Years Ago
A newsworthy birthday for a venerable source of trusted reporting
Read Poems Left by Chinese Immigrants Arriving at Angel Island, the ‘Ellis Island of the West’
The primary mission of San Francisco’s Angel Island Immigration Station was to better enforce the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and other anti-Asian laws
The Unmatched Bravery of the Harlem Hellfighters
A salute to the all-Black World War I fighting unit
Why the Peace Corps’ Mission Is Needed Now More Than Ever
On its 60th anniversary, a moment of reckoning arrives for the nation’s globe-trotting volunteers
Before the Civil War, New Orleans Was the Center of the U.S. Slave Trade
Untroubled by their actions, human traffickers like Isaac Franklin built a lucrative business providing enslaved labor for Southern farmers
On the anniversary of her 50th birthday, honoring the legacy of the first Tejana singer to top the U.S. Billboard charts with her Spanish-language album
The Florida Resort That Played an Unlikely Role in the Bay of Pigs Fiasco
Sixty years ago, the CIA-backed invasion of Cuba failed disastrously. It all began, here, on Useppa Island
Borrowing from Peter to pay Paul is a scheme made famous by Charles Ponzi. Who was this crook whose name graces this scam?
How Neil Armstrong Avoided Near-Disaster to Make the First Space Docking
Smithsonian curator Michael Neufeld recounts the harrowing details of when Gemini Vlll astronauts faced the first life-threatening, in-flight emergency
Black Protesters Have Been Rallying Against Confederate Statues for Generations
When Tuskegee student Sammy Younge, Jr., was murdered in 1966, his classmates focused their righteous anger on a local monument
How the Arts Have Inspired Social Change
Americans have a long tradition of inspiring and elevating movements for change using benefit concerts, song and other artistic traditions
The Day Soviet Aircraft Attacked American Pilots
On that April ‘Black Thursday’ 70 years ago, the air war over Korea changed as the Allies scrambled to counter the superior MiG-15 jet fighter
Gender-Inclusive Language Puts an End to the Era of ‘Manned’ Spaceflight
It is time to honor six decades of women’s contributions to spaceflight, says the Air and Space Museum, with unbiased verbs like ‘crewed’ or ‘piloted’
A new tome takes readers into collector Edward Brooke-Hitching’s “madman’s library”
Did Shakespeare Base His Masterpieces on Works by an Obscure Elizabethan Playwright?
The new book “North by Shakespeare” examines the link between the Bard of Avon and Sir Thomas North
The Thorny Politics of Presidential Portraiture
In a new podcast, the National Portrait Gallery reveals that a portrait is being commissioned of the former president
This London Building Tells the Story of a Century’s Worth of Disease and Epidemics
In the borough of Hackney, a ‘disinfecting station’ ostensibly kept the public safe from the spread of infectious illness
One Hundred Years Ago, Einstein Was Given a Hero’s Welcome by America’s Jews
The German physicist toured the nation as a fundraiser for Zionist causes, even though he was personally torn on the topic of a Jewish nation
In Search of the Authentic Ernest Hemingway
Take a deep-dive into the story behind this rarely published Smithsonian portrait of the legendary writer
Women Resistance Fighters of WWII, the Secret Lives of Ants and Other New Books to Read
These April releases elevate overlooked stories and offer insights on oft-discussed topics
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