The Far-Reaching Effects of American Incarceration
Three photo essays explore the history and modern-day consequences of the world’s highest incarceration rate
After 39 Years of Wrongful Imprisonment, Ricky Jackson Is Finally Free
Locked up for a murder he didn’t commit, he served the longest sentence of any U.S. inmate found to be innocent
March to the Joyous, Raucous Beat of the Sonic Boom of the South
College football seasons come and go, but the joyous thunder of Jackson State’s iconic marching band rolls on
A Hurricane Destroyed This Louisiana Resort Town, Never to Be Inhabited Again
The destruction of Isle Derniere resonates as history’s warning for our era of rising seas
How Disney Came to Define What Constitutes the American Experience
The entertainment company has been in the business of Americana since its inception
Why Do We Play ‘Hail to the Chief’ for the President?
A Scottish rebel features prominently in the anthem
Why 2016 Is Only the Most Recent Worst Year Ever
This year has been miserable for many, but it has plenty of competition from its predecessors in the 20th century
Did Ellis Island Officials Really Change the Names of Immigrants?
On the 125th anniversary of the famous portal to the U.S., history shows inspectors were not the ones changing people’s names
Natalie Portman’s “Jackie” Reminds Us Why JFK’s Assassination Became Our National Tragedy
A Smithsonian scholar revisits those critical decisions Jacqueline Kennedy made following the death of her husband
When the Serendipitously Named Lovings Fell in Love, Their World Fell Apart
The new film captures the quiet essence of the couples’ powerful story, says Smithsonian scholar Christopher Wilson
The Suspect, the Prosecutor, and the Unlikely Bond They Forged
New evidence shows that Homer Cummings, who would later be FDR’s attorney general, rescued an innocent man accused of murder
When the Standardization of Time Arrived in America
It used to be that each town kept its own time, and chaos reigned
For Generations of Chicagoans, Marshall Field’s Meant Business, and Christmas
The midwestern mainstay transformed commerce into a communal holiday spectacle
After Nearly 500 Years in Business, the Company that Cast the Liberty Bell Is Ceasing All Operations
London’s Whitechapel Bell Foundry will fall silent soon, but will forever be tied to an icon of American history
John Glenn and the Sexism of the Early Space Program
Fan mail sent to the astronaut reveals the rigidity of gender roles in the 1960s
A Smithsonian Curator Remembers Astronaut and U.S. Senator John Glenn
The American hero died at the age of 95
How Trump Tower Takes the Skyscraper Debate to New Heights
The future of urban development takes on a new twist when the president lives among the clouds
The Sole American Killed in the 1814 Burning of D.C. Was Related to George Washington
John Lewis was the grandnephew of the first President of the United States
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