Samuel Green Freed Himself and Others From Slavery. Then He Was Imprisoned Over Owning a Book
After buying his own liberty, the Marylander covertly assisted conductors on the Underground Railroad, including Harriet Tubman. But his possession of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” turned him into an abolitionist hero
How White Southerners Distorted the History of Ancient Egypt to Justify Slavery in the U.S.
American writers misleadingly interpreted Egypt’s past to argue that slavery was a divinely sanctioned institution
The Time When New York City Seriously Considered Seceding From the United States
A culture clash driven by finances and Old World alignments had the Big Apple contemplating leaving the Union. The Civil War ended that
The Driver’s License Used to Say Who Can Drive. Now It Says a Lot About Who We Are
What was once a simple paper card has evolved with the tech of the times as it has gone from protecting our roads to playing a role in national security
A Skirmish Early in George Washington’s Military Career Helped Define Him. It Could Have Killed Him
New evidence helps resolve enduring mysteries about a 1758 incident that nearly cost the future president his life—and shaped his views on the battles yet to come
The year’s most exciting discoveries included the site where a young George Washington stopped a friendly fire incident, the missing torso of a Buddha statue and a hidden Picasso painting
Eighty years ago, five planes vanished during a training run off the Florida coast. A patrol plane sent to search for the men went missing, too, giving rise to a host of conspiracy theories
The Ten Best History Books of 2025
Our favorite titles of the year resurrect overlooked histories and examine how the United States ended up where it is today
Untold Stories of American History
As high school students across the U.S. embraced political activism, adults turned to the authorities to shield their sons and daughters from radical influences
A train wreck that caused the death of more than a dozen commuters near the turn of the 20th century was the impetus behind a monumental project that changed the urban landscape
Why Are There So Many Shipwrecks in the Great Lakes?
Meet a maritime archaeologist who explores the historic ships and dugout canoes that lurk beneath the surface of her watery backyard
Why Aren’t There Forests in the Midwest? And More Questions From Our Readers
You’ve Got Questions. We’ve Got Experts
There was a time when shoppers could buy only as much as they could carry. And as ubiquitous as shopping carts are today, it initially took some convincing to use them
The bucolic river is famous for reversing its current a few times each day. Now, an ongoing cleanup effort is reversing decades of industrial contamination
Ahead of the PBS production’s premiere, the legendary filmmaker and co-director Sarah Botstein share insights on their research process and the surprising, long-overlooked stories featured in the six-part series
Fifty years after the freighter disappeared into the depths of Lake Superior, the mystery of its demise—and the mournful ballad it inspired—still haunt the popular imagination
The ‘Edmund Fitzgerald’ Sank Half a Century Ago. We’re Still Fascinated
A massive freighter carrying thousands of tons of iron ore disappeared in Lake Superior, setting shipping on a new course
He single-handedly held off 250 German troops and six tanks, saving an entire company. And that was just the start of what he accomplished in his too-short life
Robert H. Jackson, an American Supreme Court justice who thought of himself as “anything but a warrior,” was drafted by FDR to prosecute leading Nazis
A wreck in London broke his bones but not his spirit. So he got back on his two-wheeled horse and sailed through the Ohio sky, with half the country watching
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