For Father’s Day, Take Dad on a Tour of the Smithsonian Museums
Our featured tour: With Dad
Telling the Story of 19th-Century Native American Treasures Through Bird Feathers
Famed explorer John Wesley Powell’s archive of his 19th century travels is newly examined
The Restaurant Doodle That Launched a Political Movement
How one economist’s graph on a napkin reshaped the Republican Party and upended tax policy
Why Langston Hughes Still Reigns as a Poet for the Unchampioned
Fifty years after his death, Hughes’ extraordinary lyricism resonates with power to people
Why These Humans Are Museum Treasures, Too
A portrait photographer captured 24 staffers from the National Museum of Natural History posing with their favorite artifacts from the collections
Spring Brings a Wave of Baby Animals to the Zoo
Seven different endangered species born so far at the National Zoo and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute
How the Military Helmet Evolved From a Hazard to a Bullet Shield
With the development of Kevlar and advanced industrial design, soldiers are now better protected from traumatic brain injury
A Rare Public Display of a 17th-Century Mayan Manuscript
With the book newly digitized, scholars are reinterpreting a story of native resistance from within its pages
For Black Photographers, the Camera Records Stories of Joy and Struggle
The African American History Museum showcases for the first time signature photographs from its new collections
Cats Had Clout Long Before the Internet
For artists, cats prove to be more than elegant studio companions, but inspirations as well, says a new exhibition
What Really Felled the Hindenburg?
On the anniversary of the conflagration, mysteries still remain
From This Desk, 100 Years Ago, U.S. Operations in World War I Were Conceived
Germany’s defeat could be traced to pins in a map now on display at the Smithsonian’s American History Museum
After Nearly a Century in Storage, These World War I Artworks Still Deliver the Vivid Shock of War
Pulled from the collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Claggett Wilson’s watercolors are in a traveling show
When Artists Became Soldiers and Soldiers Became Artists
A rare opportunity to see works by the American Expeditionary Force’s World War I illustration corps, and newly found underground soldier carvings
Meet Stinky ‘Bucky,’ the Bulbophyllum Orchid that Shutdown a Smithsonian Greenhouse
Orchid expert Tom Mirenda says history records the stench of this plant as reminiscent of a thousand dead elephants rotting in the sun
A Smithsonian Historian Wanders the “Bardo,” Exploring the Spiritual World of the 19th Century
George Saunders’ new novel, “Lincoln in the Bardo” recalls the melancholy that hung over a nation at war
Two Litters of Adorable Cheetah Cubs Born in One Week
Smithsonian’s cheetah conservation program welcomes the springtime births after careful planning
Never Mind Her Stellar Jazz Career, Young Ella Fitzgerald Just Wanted to Dance
The preeminent vocalist didn’t actually start out as a singer
This Ace Aviatrix Learned to Fly Even Though Orville Wright Refused to Teach Her
With flint and derring-do, the early 20th century pilot Ruth Law ruled American skies
The Wild Rock and Roller Chuck Berry Dies
In 2012, Berry donated his red Eldorado Cadillac to the Smithsonian
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