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Alexander Graham Bell traveled to Italy at the turn of the 20th century on an audacious mission to rescue the remains of the man whose legacy endowed the Smithsonian Institution.   Read >>
Tall ships and U.S. Navy vessels sailed into Baltimore Harbor past Fort McHenry to commemorate the bicentennial of the War of 1812. Read >>
More than 2000 students from around the country competed in the 32nd annual celebration of history, held this year at the University of Maryland. Read >>
The first medical report on Lincoln's assassination has been uncovered. Read >>
Historian S. L. A. Marshall tells how he and “Papa” Hemingway liberated Paris. Read >>
Andrew Wyeth reflects on his father, the artist N. C. Wyeth. Read >>
The author took part in the first night combat with Japanese bombers. In that dramatic action, he witnessed the loss of Butch O'Hare, the famous World War II ace for whom O’Hare Airport was named. Read >>
In his second term, George Washington faced a crisis that threatened to tear apart the young republic. His wife Martha later thought that the bitterness of the debate may have hastened the president’s death, but Washington gave America the gift of peace, and an important precedent in leadership. Read >>
In his second term, George Washington faced a crisis that threatened to tear apart the young republic. His wife Martha later thought that the bitterness of the debate may have hastened the president’s death, but Washington gave America the gift of peace, and an important precedent in leadership. Read >>
Eisenhower's call to proceed with D-Day was anything but inevitable. Read >>
Inventor Nikola Tesla turned to an old trick to sell the brilliant concept of alternating current, which would enable the electrical power grid and the modern machines that run off it. Read >>
In the teeth of near defeat, General George Washington pulled out miraculous mid-winter victories. Read >>
When the Palmetto State threatened to nullify federal statutes at will, President Jackson met it with tough rhetoric and a threat of force -- and postponed the Civil War for three decades. Read >>
Presidential conventions at which no candidate won on the first ballot have produced some of our best Presidents including Abraham Lincoln and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Three U.S President didn’t win a single vote on the first try at their convention. Read >>
Ike’s son, historian John Eisenhower, recalls attending meetings with the British wartime leader and reflects on his character and accomplishments. Read >>
It has been called one of the most consequential debates in American history. The Revolution's greatest orator later fought to stop ratification of the Constitution because of his worries about the powers proposed for the federal government. Read >>
When the Army arrested a chief of the Ponca Tribe in 1878 for leaving their reservation, he sued the federal government and won — the first time courts recognized that a Native American had legal rights. Read >>
A longtime contributor and former editor introduces the special anniversary issue. Read >>
Its peculiarly local exuberance is nourished by rare traditions and an untamed individualism. Read >>
This quiet Hudson River city became the "cradle of New York State." Read >>
Their trails pioneered new frontiers and colored the social, political and economic pattern of a nation. Read >>
A magnificent historical center portrays the heroic tale of the Lone Star State. Read >>
Cowhands careless with branding irons invited a fatal attack of lead poisoning or the nether end of a rope. Read >>
The Statue of Liberty has been glorified, romanticized, trivialized, and over-publicized. But the idea of “Liberty Enlightening the World” endures.  Read >>
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After becoming president, George Washington undertook an extraordinary journey through all 13 colonies to unite – and learn from – a diverse population of citizens. His quest to unite the nation and discover the "temper and disposition" of its people are an inspiration to us today. Read >>
When the first African-Americans to crew a U.S. warship sailed into the war-tossed North Atlantic, they couldn't have known it would take 50 years to gain honor in their own country. Read >>
With his command threatened by allegations of drunkenness, Ulysses S. Grant went on the attack, won two major victories, demanded “Unconditional Surrender,” and nearly split the Confederacy in half. Read >>

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