Nearly three million visitors flocked to Canada to see the five identical sisters—the first quintuplets to survive infancy. The siblings later said the publicity destroyed their childhoods
A new exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts spotlights 40 women who found fame in the Low Countries between 1600 and 1750, including Koerten, Judith Leyster and Clara Peeters
Creator Richard O’Brien reflects on how the 1975 movie musical became a haven for the “marginalized and disenfranchised”
The young Connecticut schoolmaster’s intelligence-gathering mission was ill-fated from the start. But after he was hanged by the British in September 1776, his story became the stuff of legend
Untold Stories of American History
Did an Enslaved Chocolatier Help Hercules Mulligan Foil a Plot to Assassinate George Washington?
New research sheds light on the possible identity of Cato, the Black man who conveyed the tailor’s lifesaving intelligence to the Americans during the Revolutionary War
The Second Italo-Ethiopian War and the Spanish Civil War offered Melva L. Price and her fellow female activists an opportunity to examine the links between racism and fascism
A new biography examines how 19th-century Americans remembered Mary Ball Washington, who raised the future president largely on her own after her husband’s death in 1743
Libya’s civil war has placed the Uan Muhuggiag mummy at risk. But negotiations are underway to transport the rare artifact from Libya to Rome, where it will undergo restoration and scientific analysis
The Tiny New York Town Where Mediums Give Voice to the Dead
Lily Dale is home to about 40 mediums who connect thousands of spiritual seekers with their deceased loved ones
Modern tennis’ predecessor was a different—and potentially more dangerous—test of athletic prowess
How a Deaf Quarterback Changed Sports Forever By Inventing the Huddle
Paul Hubbard called for the football team at Gallaudet University to circle around him back in 1894
Frank Kameny Helped Chart a Path to Liberation for Millions of Gay Americans
Personal notebooks reveal what life was like for the Washington activist who spent decades advocating for equal rights in the federal government and elsewhere
In correspondence with a passionate abolitionist in London, the great American orator didn’t hold back when talking about the 16th president, or his successor, the much-maligned Andrew Johnson
Four Famous American Women Who Were Also Prolific Letter Writers
In a long and storied tradition, these bold women recorded history—and shaped it—through their correspondence
Most Americans think of George Washington’s winter encampment as brutal and deadly. But Friedrich von Steuben, an out-of-work military veteran from Europe, turned it into a fruitful training ground
The First Magazines Written for Career Women Reveal a Portrait of Immense Creativity and Hope
Publications including “Mademoiselle,” “Glamour” and the long-forgotten “Charm” first emerged in the 1930s to satisfy an emergent force in the workplace
Traveling down a river in West Bengal reveals the enduring imprint of empire—and the soul of a region shaped by centuries of change
Gouverneur Morris wrote the preamble to the Constitution and shaped the future of the nascent United States. Later in life, he rejected the foundational document as a failure
In Louisiana, heat and hurricanes can feel like a generational curse. After two decades, an editor who grew up in the state remembers and reflects on Katrina
In the conclusion of a long-awaited turn of events, the Great Plains tribe has now reclaimed cherished items stolen from their ancestors by the U.S. Army
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