How Food Brought Success to a Chef, a Cookbook Author and a Restaurateur
Historian Ashley Rose Young shares research from the Smithsonian’s 23-year-long ‘American Food History Project’
Five Roles Robots Will Play in the Future of Farming
From picking fruit to pulling weeds, robotics are bringing precision farming to life
Could Eating Sea Urchins Help Revive Kelp Forests?
A Norwegian ‘urchin ranching’ company wants to take the echinoderms from the wild, fatten them up and sell them to restaurants
Hundreds of big retail centers have gone under, but the shop-til-you drop lifestyle isn’t dead yet
Move Over Fake Meat, It’s Time for Veggie Seafood
Here are six companies bringing you animal-free fish products, from tomato-based sushi to “Fysh Sauce”
The Accidental Invention of the Slinky
The idea for the timeless toy sprung to mind when Naval engineer Richard James dropped some coiled wires
How the Wiffle Ball Came to Be
Patented in 1957, the lightweight ball saved players’ arms and more than a few windows
For 100 Years, KitchenAid Has Been the Stand-Up Brand of Stand Mixers
Even celebrity chef Julia Child said that the sleek appliance made mixing ‘marvelous’
How Women Are Leading the Charge to Recycle Whole Houses
From lobbying for changes to city laws to running reuse centers for building supplies, women are dominating the deconstruction industry
The Most Irish Town in America Was Built on Seaweed
After discovering ‘Irish moss’ in coastal waters, Irish immigrants launched a booming mossing industry in Scituate, Massachusetts
The National Museum of African American History and Culture recreated one of the first businesses in the city to be owned by a black woman
The Unexpected History of the Air Conditioner
The invention was once received with chilly skepticism but has become a fixture of American life
How the Invention of Scotch Tape Led to a Revolution in How Companies Managed Employees
College dropout Richard Drew became an icon of 20th century innovation, inventing cellophane tape, masking tape and more
‘Vis-O-Matic’ Was the 1950s Version of Online Shopping
A Canadian department store tried to revolutionize buying when it opened a shop with booths and screens for ordering merchandise
Separating Truth From Myth in the So-Called ‘Golden Age’ of the Detroit Auto Industry
The post-war era’s labor unrest and market instability has seemingly been forgotten in the public’s memory
The Last Remaining Rail Car That ‘Witnessed’ the Transcontinental Railroad’s Momentous Day
‘Crocker’s Car’ brought the tycoon Leland Stanford to connect the East Coast to the West in 1869
For the First Time, Green Power Tops Coal Industry in Energy Production in April
Renewable energy outworked coal in April—and will likely do the same in May—though the trend likely won’t last once air-conditioners switch on
German Family That Owns Krispy Kreme Admits It Profited From Nazi Ties
Upon learning that their ancestors had relied on forced labor, the family was ‘ashamed and white as sheets,’ a spokesperson said
How Business Executive Madam C. J. Walker Became a Powerful Influencer of the Early 20th Century
A tin of hair conditioner in the Smithsonian collections reveals a story of the entrepreneurial and philanthropic success of a former washerwoman
The death of 19 immigrants may have unified the labor movement, but powerful interests left their fates unrecognized until decades later
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