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His grandmother wanted him to be crowned emperor in Paris; he didn’t want anything to do with his royal background. Read >>
Why the possible liaison between Thomas Jefferson and his slave Sally Hemings matters to us. Read >>
How a tireless impresario parlayed a cloud of smoke into several fortunes Read >>
Winter is the time to discover the Bermuda that British empire builders and Confederate agents called home. Read >>
Bessie Smith was the greatest blues singer of all time, and her influence still permeates popular music, though almost no one listens to her records. Here's an appreciation by an eminent jazz singer. Read >>
After three times traveling the trail they blazed, the author imagines what the two captains of Jefferson’s Corps of Discovery would make of the civilization we have built on the tremendous promise they offered. Read >>
In a hard war, theirs may have been the hardest job of all. Along with Army doctors and nurses, they worked something very close to a miracle in the European theater. Read >>
Charles Saxon's cartoons are a definitive record of upper-class suburban life in the 1960s and ’70s. Read >>
Whenever a new information technology has been born, there’s been somebody on hand to try to censor it. Read >>
Will the current bull market die spectacularly, a la 1929, or—as in 1974—will it strangle in weird silence? Read >>
Traditions nearly 500 years old underlie San Antonio’s month-long celebration. Read >>
Will Rogers might not have died if Wiley Post had taken my advice about his airplane. Read >>

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