For more than a century, New Orleans' Black residents have donned Native-inspired attire to celebrate Carnival
Untold Stories of American History
A new book tells the definitive history of an Alabama community founded by survivors of the slave trade
A sweeping book offers a provocative new history arguing that today's inequality can be traced back to the state's founding
The W.F.K. Travers painting hid in plain sight at a New Jersey town hall for 80 years before it was restored and brought back to Washington
A century ago, a Princeton mathematician created what would become a mainstay of the American playground
Thanks to a few horticulturalists with an eye for history, a garden lost to time peeks out from the creeping vines
The waterway opened up the heartland to trade, transforming small hamlets into industrial centers
Glory goes to the 6888, who overcame discrimination from fellow service members and are finally getting the recognition they earned
Since dieting began in the 1830s, the ever-changing nutritional advice has skimped on science
Neal V. Loving, whose memoir will soon be released by Smithsonian Books, built his own planes, ran a flight school and conducted research for the Air Force
With bar graphs and pie charts, the sociologist and his Atlanta students demonstrated Black excellence in the face of widespread discrimination
“AirSpace” speaks to astronomer Shauna Edson and “Portraits” drops in on activist and author Gloria Steinhem
The retail giant’s mail-order business reigned supreme for more than a century, offering everything from quack cures to ready-to-build homes
A new book reverses the narrative of the Age of Discovery, which has long evoked the ambitions of Europeans looking to the Americas rather than vice versa
The day and evening ensembles are now the centerpiece of the American History Museum's popular "First Ladies" exhibition
The award-winning Beninese artist unveils a work dedicated to the president’s “generosity of heart”
Always a dealmaker, then-senator LBJ negotiated with segregationists to pass a bill that cautiously advanced racial equality
The "Keuka" sank in 1932, just three years after its grand opening as a dance hall, roller rink and illicit party boat
A new book unearths the startling numbers behind underage enlistment during the Civil War
The debate over how to manage the wealthy's fortunes after their deaths traces its roots to Henry VIII and Elizabeth I
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