A New Film Details the FBI’s Relentless Pursuit of Martin Luther King Jr.
Smithsonian scholar says the time is ripe to examine the man’s complexities for a more accurate and more inspirational history
The True History Behind ‘One Night in Miami’
Regina King’s directorial debut dramatizes a 1964 meeting between Cassius Clay, Malcolm X, Sam Cooke and Jim Brown
From a Small, Rural Schoolhouse, One Teacher Challenged Nativist Attacks Against Immigration
In the wake of World War I, rabid anti-German sentiment led to the arrest, later deemed unjust by the U.S. Supreme Court, of Robert Meyer
The Life and Death of a Yiddish Puppet Theater
Puppets weren’t a common form of entertainment in Jewish culture
Who Was Charles Curtis, the First Vice President of Color?
A member of the Kaw Nation, Curtis served under Herbert Hoover, but he left a troubling legacy on Native American issues
From His Tattered Chair, TV’s Archie Bunker Caricatured America’s Divides
The 1971 show aired the fraught political differences that were “All in the Family”
A Doomed Arctic Expedition, Number-Free Math and Other New Books to Read
These five January releases may have been lost in the news cycle
What ‘Bridgerton’ Gets Wrong About Corsets
Women’s rights were severely restricted in 19th-century England, but their undergarments weren’t to blame
Warm Up Your Winter With the National Portrait Gallery’s Online Events
Visitors and families can enjoy all the museum has to offer from the comfort of their own homes
Women Artists Reflect on How They Helped Shape SoHo
A Smithsonian online event kicks off a new monthly series exploring the pioneering art films and videos made by women
The Way Americans Remember the Blackwell Sisters Shortchanges Their Legacy
Elizabeth and Emily Blackwell deserve to have their incredible stories told in full
Have Any North American Species Become Invasive Elsewhere in the World?
You’ve got question. We’ve got experts
An Evening With Martin Sheen and 24 Other Smithsonian Programs Streaming in January
Kick off the New Year with Smithsonian Associates’ virtual multi-part courses, studio arts classes and study tours
A Brief History of Peanut Butter
The bizarre sanitarium staple that became a spreadable obsession
New scholarship points to a paradox of historic scope: Our writing system was devised by people who couldn’t read
The Lost History of Yellowstone
Debunking the myth that the great national park was a wilderness untouched by humans
This Ohio Golf Course, Built Atop a Hopewell Earthwork, Is Now the Subject of a Lawsuit
A legal battle brews over access to some of the world’s largest human-made structures of their kind
Meet Joseph Rainey, the First Black Congressman
Born enslaved, he was elected to Congress in the wake of the Civil War. But the impact of this momentous step in U.S. race relationships did not last long
The Top Ten Online Exhibitions of 2020
From a Smithsonian show on first ladies to Mexican muralists, Rembrandt and the making of the Met, these were some of our favorite virtual experiences
Father Reginald Foster Used Latin to Bring History Into the Present
Who speaks Latin these days? A surprisingly large number of people, thanks to the late friar, who died on Christmas Day at 81
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