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July 2025

American Heritage Winter 2026
American Heritage Winter 2026

Welcome to the largest issue of American Heritage ever published! We will be adding essays over the next weeks.

A year ago, we debated what to do for the magazine's 75th Anniversary. Given the widespread confusion about what our nation stands for, we decided to go back to basics, to remind readers of some of the values, principles, and accomplishments that in fact “Made America Great.”

The need is obvious. Today, the United States faces real threats around the world, and we need citizens and allies that believe in what America stands for. As Benjamin Franklin told the Declaration signers 250 years ago, “We must all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.”

Editor’s Note: Stephanie Gorton is a prize-winning biographer and journalist. Among her books is Citizen Reporters: S. S. McClure, Ida Tarbell, and the Magazine that Rewrote America, a fascinating history of the team of journalists who made publishing history. Portions of this essay appeared in Gorton’s book.

In January 1903, journalist Ida Tarbell felt her usual cheerful stamina wearing thin. In the midst of an investigative series on John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil for McClure’s magazine, she began to long for escape. Not content with monopolizing the oil industry, Standard Oil had swallowed her life, too.

Editor’s Note: We were saddened by the recent passing of Norman Mineta and asked Alan Simpson, who served for 18 years as Republican senator from Wyoming, to write recollections of his friend for American Heritage. Mineta was a former Democratic Congressman who served as Secretary of Commerce under President Bill Clinton, then Secretary of Transportation under President George W. Bush. He was the first person of East Asian descent to be named a Cabinet secretary. 

The friendship of Norm Mineta and Al Simpson for eight decades – and their ability to work together across party lines – remain an inspiration for us all. It will be memorialized this summer with groundbreaking of the Mineta-Simpson Institute at Heart Mountain Interpretive Center, on the grounds of the camp that imprisoned Mineta’s family 80 years ago. 

On December 7, 1941, the Empire of Japan struck a blow to our Nation’s heart. On that very day, Federal agents came to Norm Mineta’s house to inform the family that they were “under surveillance.” That was the beginning of the odyssey for Norman Y. Mineta. 

PROFESSOR OF HISTORY at Columbia and twice Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer, Allan Nevins pays a classic tribute to the value of historical study at the “grass roots” level in this thoughtful introduction to the new AMERICAN STATES SERIES. He also makes clear the need for such a series, which has been projected by the American Association for State and Local History to tell the story of America in words and pictures, through the color fill and all too little known pageant of its regional and local history. The first volume — on Vermont — is now available, and volumes on New York, Indiana, and Pennsylvania are being scheduled.    
 

The roots of the American heritage
The roots of the American heritage are deep and wide spreading like the patriarchal tree’s.

By S.K. Stevens, President, AASLH

Our American heritage of freedom, with its emphasis upon tolerance, with its opportunity to achieve the utmost liberty of thought and action consistent with the good of all, with its “government of the people, by the people, for the people” is our most precious possession. 

I believe we are at long last appreciative of the fact that it is worth more to us than all the gold at Fort Knox, or the wealth represented in all our bank deposits and the value of our products of farms, mines, and factories. If our freedom is ever lost, all of these material things would mean little.

Help us keep telling the story of America.

Now in its 75th year, American Heritage relies on contributions from readers like you to survive. You can support this magazine of trusted historical writing and the volunteers that sustain it by donating today.

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