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The French aristocrat's observations of American scoiety are as relevant today as they were when first written Read >>
A rudderless derelict, she had drifted 1,100 miles through polar ice. Her return to England was a tribute to Anglo-American amity Read >>
John Hay’s ringing phrase helped nominate T. R., but it covered an embarrassing secret that remained concealed for thirty years. Read >>
John Hay’s ringing phrase helped nominate T. R., but it covered an embarrassing secret that remained concealed for thirty years. Read >>
Before Plymouth Colony there was Sagadahoc, the short-lived settlement for which Sir Ferdinando Gorges had high hopes Read >>
Their religion and customs were strange, but these master farmers from the Russian steppes turned a treeless prairie into America’s granary Read >>
Private Pullmans Were Once the Hallmark of Affluence and Social Success Read >>
Andersonville was merely the worst of a bad lot; North and South alike, they were more lethal than shot and shell Read >>
The call to convert the heathen brought gentle Narcissa Whitman and her husband to Oregon Territory—and a brutal death Read >>
Taking on all comers, he had always dropped his man—but his supreme moment came in bare-knuckle boxing’s last great fight Read >>
Forty years ago a Boston banker suggested that the Battle of Lexington had become a myth, and later evidence proves him right Read >>
Among his many other achievements, Jefferson was one of the leading architects of his day, responsible for the introduction of the Greek Revival style into America. Read >>
Among his many other achievements, Jefferson was one of the leading architects of his day, responsible for the introduction of the Greek Revival style into America. Read >>
Montgomery Meigs, like many other vengeful Northerners, fell into an old error: he was convinced of his own innate superiority over a large segment of fellow citizens. Read >>
Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes asserted “a slight claim on the gratitude of mankind” for inventing a cheap and handy device for viewing three-dimensional photographs. History is still in his debt for the craze he started and the pictures it has left behind Read >>
When Jane Addams opened Hull House for Chicago’s immigrants, she began asking questions a local politician preferred not to answer Read >>
How folklore, the Reformation, and three inventive New Yorkers turned a dimly known Near Eastern saint into a jolly, secular Santa Claus Read >>

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