The Army Veteran Who Became the First to Hike the Entire Appalachian Trail
His journal and hiking boots are in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History
Two Smithsonian Scientists Retrace the Mysterious Circumstances of an 1866 Death and Change History
Did the 19th-century naturalist Robert Kennicott die of his own hand?
Recognizing traditional culture in the information age is ever more important argues the director of the Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage
Smithsonian’s Behind-the-Scenes ‘Sidedoor’ Podcast Returns for Second Season
New episodes explore a 150-year-old cold case, the history of beer, war photography and more
Why Piri Thomas’ Coming of Age Memoir Still Resonates Today
“Down These Mean Streets” was an instant classic, a text of painful truths
Come for the Bug Eating and Get a Lesson in Humanity from Andrew Zimmern
A Q&A with the Travel Channel’s ‘Bizarre Foods’ Chef
The Long and Winding Road of Yoko Ono’s Art
A Hirshhorn exhibition of four works opens the same week Ono is credited, 46 years later, as a co-writer of the chart-topping ballad “Imagine.”
The Musical Legacy Behind the Tupac Biopic ‘All Eyez on Me’
Curator Dwandalyn Reece from the Smithsonian’s African American Museum investigates
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
Tarzan’s Favorite Mode of Travel, the Liana Vine, Chokes Off a Tree’s Ability to Bear Fruit
With lowered fruit production, fewer seeds are dispersed to grow new trees
Medicine Creek, the Treaty That Set the Stage for Standing Rock
The Fish Wars of the 1960s led to an affirmation of Native American rights
A Pioneering Force of Harlequin Frogs Set Out to Help Save Their Species
Outfitted with tiny transmitters, these frogs are released to face the challenging chytrid fungus that decimated their populations
It Takes Two Museums to Cover the Work of this Prolific German Neo-Expressionist
Europe’s celebrated Markus Lüpertz has a huge appetite for creativity. He’s also a poet, writer, set designer and jazz pianist
This Artist’s Worldview Drips With Unending Pessimism
“Man is inherently self-destructive, and whatever is built will be destroyed,” says painter Donald Sultan of his “Disaster Paintings”
Aerialist and this year’s Folklife Festival performer Dolly Jacobs didn’t have to run away to join the circus; she lived it
Safer Digs for Tortoises Put a Damper on Their Love Lives
A new genetic study surprised scientists who learned the males were not breeding
Noose Found in National Museum of African American History and Culture
This marks the second such incident within a week on Smithsonian grounds
Why It’s So Hard to Find the Original Owners of Nazi-Looted Art
International experts recently gathered at Smithsonian to discuss the state of international provenance research
What a Vampire Bat Can Teach Us About the Economics of Friendship
A Smithsonian scientist says important lessons about making friends and sharing can be learned from these blood-sucking creatures
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