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Our Pleasure

March 2023
1min read

Your August/September 1984 feature “The Dawn of the Railroad” was a delight. Such visual gems not only enrich our knowledge of our past but are also a researcher’s joy.

We hope you enjoy our work.

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Stories published from "February/March 1985"

Authored by: Deborah O’keefe

They were called “friendly visitors” and they indeed visited, but could they really be considered friendly?

Authored by: Coley Taylor

The years the famous writer spent in their town were magic to a young boy and his sister.

Authored by: Oliver E. Allen

On the eve of the Normandy invasion, a training mission in the English Channel came apart in fire and horror. For years, the grim story was suppressed.

Authored by: Rebecca Martin

Israel Sack made a fortune by seeing early the craft in fine old American furniture

Authored by: James Card

A little-known ancestor of the nightly news comes to light

Authored by: William Serrin

At a time of crisis for American labor, an organizer looks back on the turbulent fifty-year career that brought him from the shop floor to the presidency of the United Automobile Workers.

Authored by: Lones Seiber

The GIs came home to find that a political machine had taken over their Tennessee county. What they did about it astounded the nation.

Authored by: Lynne Cheney

He built a career and a fortune out of shocking his fellow Americans

Authored by: Robert Uhl

A young artist takes on a venerable genre

Featured Articles

Often thought to have been a weak president, Carter was strong-willed in doing what he thought was right, regardless of expediency or the political fallout.

Rarely has the full story been told how a famed botanist, a pioneering female journalist, and First Lady Helen Taft battled reluctant bureaucrats to bring Japanese cherry trees to Washington. 

Why have thousands of U.S. banks failed over the years? The answers are in our history and politics.

In his Second Inaugural Address, Abraham Lincoln embodied leading in a time of polarization, political disagreement, and differing understandings of reality.

Native American peoples and the lands they possessed loomed large for Washington, from his first trips westward as a surveyor to his years as President.

A hundred years ago, America was rocked by riots, repression, and racial violence.

During Pres. Washington’s first term, an epidemic killed one tenth of all the inhabitants of Philadelphia, then the capital of the young United States.

Now a popular state park, the unassuming geological feature along the Illinois River has served as the site of centuries of human habitation and discovery.  

The recent discovery of the hull of the battleship Nevada recalls her dramatic action at Pearl Harbor and ultimate revenge on D-Day as the first ship to fire on the Nazis.

Our research reveals that 19 artworks in the U.S. Capitol honor men who were Confederate officers or officials. What many of them said, and did, is truly despicable.

Here is probably the most wide-ranging look at Presidential misbehavior ever published in a magazine.

When Germany unleashed its blitzkreig in 1939, the U.S. Army was only the 17th largest in the world. FDR and Marshall had to build a fighting force able to take on the Nazis, against the wishes of many in Congress.