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  1. The Life And Death Of Thomas Nast

    By Thomas Nast St. Hill, October 1971, Volume 22, Issue 6

    HIS GRANDSON RECALLS: More >>>

  2. N.C.

    By Andrew Wyeth, May/June 1987, Volume 38, Issue 4

    The distinguished artist talks intimately about the art, the emotions, and the unique talent of his illustrator father, Newell Convers Wyeth More >>>

  3. Travel: In Search Of Albuquerque’s 300-year-old Past—and Its Neon-lit Present

    By Carla Davidson, February/March 2007, Volume 58, Issue 1

    Last April, when i mentioned that I was flying to Albuquerque, several people assumed I was headed on to Santa Fe and seemed surprised that I wasn’t. “What’s there?” someone asked. I said I’ More >>>

  4. Libbie Custer

    By Gene Smith, December 1993, Volume 44, Issue 8

    She spent almost sixty years commemorating her marriage—and her memories of it quite literally kept her alive More >>>

  5. Enlisted For Life

    By Hiller B. Zobel, June/July 1986, Volume 37, Issue 4

    Oliver Wendell Holmes was wounded three times in some of the worst fighting of the Civil War. But for him, the most terrible battles were the ones he had missed. More >>>

  6. Thomas Hart Benton: An Artist in America

    By Robert S. Gallagher, June 1973, Volume 24, Issue 4

    The great American Realist painter Thomas Hart Benton reflects on his life, his work, his colleagues, and much more. More >>>

  7. Barnstorming The U.S. Mail

    By Virginia Van D…, August 1974, Volume 25, Issue 5

    “GENERAL,” F.D.R. DEMANDED, “WHEN ARE THESE AIR MAIL KILLINGS GOING TO STOP?” More >>>

  8. The Elusive Swamp Fox

    By George F. Scheer, April 1958, Volume 9, Issue 3

    Around Francis Marion there has sprung up an overgrowth of legend as tangled as the swamps he fought in. Here is an authoritative account of his role in the Revolution More >>>

  9. Builders For The Carriage Trade

    By Harrison Kinney, October 1956, Volume 7, Issue 6

    The Brewsters spanned an era and spanned it with style More >>>

  10. Private Yankee Doodle

    By Joseph Plumb Martin, April 1962, Volume 13, Issue 3

    BEING A narrative of some of the adventures, dangers and sufferings of a revolutionary soldier, interspersed with anecdotes of incidents that occurred within his own observation. More >>>

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