The 25 newest additions to the national playlist at the Library of Congress have been deemed “worthy of preservation for all time based on their cultural, historical or aesthetic importance in the nation’s recorded sound heritage”
Filmmaker Georges Méliès employed some of his signature special effects techniques to create comedy in “Gugusse and the Automaton”
See the Stunning 171-Year-Old Sketch That Helped Put Yosemite on the Map
The Library of Congress has acquired a drawing and accompanying lithograph of Yosemite Falls created by Gold Rush-era artist Thomas Almond Ayres in 1855
“The Incredibles,” “Inception” and “The Grand Budapest Hotel” join more than 900 titles preserved by the Library of Congress
Smithsonian Photo Contest Galleries
These 15 Photographs Capture What It’s Like to Walk Through Wonderful, Historic Washington, D.C.
Enjoy this selection of images of the nation’s capital from the Smithsonian Magazine Photo Contest
The young Connecticut schoolmaster’s intelligence-gathering mission was ill-fated from the start. But after he was hanged by the British in September 1776, his story became the stuff of legend
Want to See the Original Lyrics for ‘Over the Rainbow’? All You Need Is a Library Card
The Library of Congress has acquired a collection of musical manuscripts and other rare artifacts connected to “The Wizard of Oz”
From a list of 2,600 nominations submitted by the public, the Library of Congress has selected 25 songs, albums and sounds that are at least ten years old to preserve for posterity
Gutenberg Bible Reunited With Rare 15th-Century Devotional Print Once Tucked Inside Its Pages
Two centuries after they were separated, the print and the Bible are on display together at the Huntington Library in California
Released in 1915, the film was directed by Francis Ford, the brother of famed filmmaker John Ford. It had been listed in a record of 7,200 silent films classified as “lost”
This year’s list includes a diverse set of American films celebrating various genres and storytellers
‘Home Alone,’ ‘The Nightmare Before Christmas’ and More Join the National Film Registry
Twenty-five films were chosen based on their “cultural, historic or aesthetic” importance
A Brief History of Banned Books in America
Attempts to restrict what kids in school can read are on the rise. But American book banning started with the Puritans, 140 years before the United States
Super Mario Bros., Madonna and More Join the National Recording Registry
Every year, the Library of Congress selects 25 recordings that are “culturally, historically or aesthetically important”
Every year, the Library of Congress selects 25 films of “cultural, historic or aesthetic importance”
Ada Limón Is a Poet Laureate for the 21st Century
Her work explores “what it looks like to have America in the room”
In Thousands of Recordings, Jim Metzner Collected Sounds From Around the World
The Library of Congress has acquired the prolific radio producer’s full body of work
Lizzo Played a 200-Year-Old Glass Flute Given to James Madison
The Library of Congress invited the musician, a classically trained flutist, to play the instrument at her concert this week
What Makes the Library of Congress a Monument to Democracy
The world’s largest book repository has expanded far beyond its original scope to include sound recordings and digitized collections
This Man Was the Only Eyewitness to the Deaths of Both Lincoln and Garfield
Almon F. Rockwell’s newly resurfaced journals, excerpted exclusively here, offer an incisive account of the assassinated presidents’ final moments
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