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Time Again

March 2023
1min read

Like most people, I rarely take the time to compliment what I enjoy, waiting instead until there is something to complain of. But today I break with a long-standing tradition to say how thrilled I am to see the return of “The Time Machine” in the September issue.

For years it was the first thing I turned to when the latest American Heritage arrived—short little “exercise” pieces to get my brain ready for the feature articles. The latter teach me about the “important stuff” in history; “The Time Machine” and “American Characters” tell me about what mattered to people.

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Stories published from "December 1996"

Authored by: Jeff Kisseloff

A HALF-CENTRY AGO Harry Dubin bought his son a camera, and together they made a remarkable series of photographs of a city full of blue-collar workers—all of them Dubin

Authored by: Frederic D. Schwarz

Bedfellows Make Strange Politics

Authored by: Frederic D. Schwarz

Purple Haze

Authored by: The Editors

Land of the Free

Authored by: The Editors

Putsch Comes to Shove

Authored by: Richard Reeves

A VETERAN JOURNALIST reflects on how public discourse has been tarnished by the press’s relentless war against Presidents—including his own biggest offense

Authored by: Robert K. Krick

COMING TO TERMS WITH THE MOST COMPELLING AND MYSTERIOUS OF CIVIL WAR HEROES

Authored by: Stuart Leuthner

ROBERT MOSES built small with the same imperial vigor as he built big, and at his behest the art of making scale-model cities reached its peak. The result still survives, and although few New Yorkers know about it, they can see their whole town—right down to their own houses or apartment buildings—perfectly reproduced.

Authored by: The Editors

AMERICANS have been scaling down their cities for a century and a half

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