What does history tell us about presidents who have tried to push the limits of the system?
Thirty years later, an Oklahoma native reflects on one of the deadliest domestic terrorist attacks in American history.
As president, Dwight D. Eisenhower took a moderate position on many issues, believing that “good judgment seeks balance and progress.”
The Constitution is more than a legal code. It is also a framework for union and solidarity.
Abraham Lincoln learned much of what made him a great president — honesty, sincerity, toughness, and humility — from his early reading and from studying the lives of Washington and Franklin.
To call it loaded question does not begin to do justice to the matter, given America’s tortured racial history and its haunting legacy.
The author, who once served under General Patton and whose father, Dwight D. Eisenhower, was Patton's commanding officer, shares his memories of "Ol' Blood and Guts."
A child of the South's "Lost Cause," Truman broke with his convictions to make civil rights a concern of the national government for the first time since Reconstruction. In so doing, he changed the nation forever.
The great tragedy of the twenty-eighth President as witnessed by his loyal lieutenant, the thirty-first.
Even though he had no military training, Lincoln quickly rose to become one of America’s most talented commanders.