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The Polish poet stayed twelve days and saw it all—the great gardens, pretty Nellie Custis, the distillery, the toy Bastille, the wretched slave huts, the great man himself denouncing the irritating French Read >>
On a government surveying party in the Pacific Northwest eighty-five years ago, nothing was more valuable than a sense of humor. Topographer Alfred Downing had one that happily showed in his sketches Read >>
Had there been a Warren Commission exactly a century ago, when Abraham Lincoln was shot, its report might have read like the somber, moving, and impressively researched book from which the following narrative is taken. Read >>
George Catlin painted a moving portrait of friend Joseph Chadwick just before his friend's untimely death in the Texas Revolution Read >>
Or, How to Write a Smash Hit the First Time You Try Read >>
"My God, it talks!” said the Emperor of Brazil. So the new invention did—but not until Alexander Graham Bell and his assistant had solved some brain racking problems Read >>
To become a successful local hero, get a good biographer and outlive your detractors Read >>
The furnaces were cooled, and Carnegie’s great steel plant stood empty—but dawn would bring one of the bloodiest labor-management struggles in U.S. history Read >>
The hair-raising deeds of Throwing Down, The Other Magpie, and Elk Hollering in the Water lead one to believe that the female of the red-skinned species was Read >>
Neglected for over half a century, Emanuel Leutze’s huge historical canvas hovered near oblivion. Then this magazine helped to rediscover Read >>
In 1917 Bernard J, Gallagher, a fresh-faced medical school graduate, left the lakes of his native Minnesota to make the world safe for democracy and learned that war was just what Shernian said it was Read >>
The natives never could live quite happily with “off-island” civilization—but neither could they live without it Read >>
A boy who fought at Bull Run tells of prebattle excitement and bewilderment on the field Read >>

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