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Congress has agreed on something: designating a national museum and library for George Marshall. Now, it's the Senate's turn. Read >>
More than 600 donors chipped in to help fund the re-launch of the magazine. Read >>
Incensed that many leading European scientists had belittled North America's climate and fauna, Thomas Jefferson shipped them evidence and published a long reply in Notes on the State of Virginia. Read >>
Jefferson transformed an elegant country house into an American symbol, a paradigm for the young nation’s architecture. Read >>
We celebrate one of America's greatest historians with an anthology of his writing. Read >>
It became convenient to portray Benedict Arnold as a conniving traitor, but the truth is more complex. The brilliant general often failed to get credit for his military wins, suffered painful wounds, lost his fortune while others profiteered, and finally gave up on the disorganized and often ineffective efforts to win the American Revolution. Read >>
It is important to tell the story of the Constitution’s origins in a way that demythifies it. Impressive as they were, the men who wrote the Constitution were not demigods; they had interests, prejudices, and moral blind spots. Read >>
The battle of Monmouth was pivotal in the struggle for independence, enabling George Washington to change the narrative of the war and eventually solidify his own role in our nation's history. Read >>
It's often portrayed as an orderly conflict between patriots, Tories, and British, but the American Revolution caused much suffering, dislocation, and economic decline, and had major effects on Native Americans and Spanish, French, Dutch, and other colonists worldwide. Read >>
To explore the American Revolution through the eyes of John Singleton Copley is to see it with fresh eyes, to understand that it was a civil war with many shades of allegiance. Read >>
She functioned as Franklin Roosvelt's de facto chief-of-staff, yet Missy LeHand's role has been misrepresented and overlooked by historians. Read >>
The author was a high school football player when a junior coach from West Point tried to recruit him. Years later, the player discovered who the now-famous coach was, and learned a valuable lesson.  Read >>
Bill Veeck changed baseball forever, integrating the American League in 1949 and creating a variety of stunts and promotions to bring more people to the stadium. Read >>
The Trump Administration has proposed massive cuts to history programs whose mission is to teach Americans what made their country great Read >>
American Heritage, the beloved, 68-year-old magazine of history, returns to regular publication on our Nation’s Birthday, July 4, 2017. Read >>
A slideshow of historic posters, political cartoons, and parodies of Lady Liberty Read >>
Arthur Clarke predicted that a revolution in communications would bring electronic mail, telecommuting, the internet, and inexpensive long-distance calls in an important, but forgotten 1962 essay, published by American Heritage. Read >>
Once the most famous Chinese dish in America, chop suey helped spur the growth of Chinese restaurants. A Smithsonian curator is now criss-crossing the country to research its beginnings.  Read >>
A special issue of American Heritage offers excerpts from seven books nominated for the prestigious George Washington Prize. Read >>
A historian looks at the distinctive Midwestern identity of Wilder and her "Little House on the Prairie" books. Read >>
In order to have a well-informed citizenry, it's critical to focus on history and civics education in our schools. Read >>
The modern version of an African-American spiritual has helped draw together people who are fighting for justice. Read >>
Members of the Maryland Forces guard the memories of the dramatic history at Fort Frederick, the best-preserved fort from the former English colonies in America.  Read >>
Working closely with President Lincoln, Secretary of War Stanton was tireless in his dedication to help win the Civil War. But his abruptness could sometimes be counterproductive. Read >>

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