Getting ready for America 250? Here are some US history facts most people get wrong Read More
Forensic scientists say the Pentagon could use DNA to help identify missing service members faster. Read More
Martha Mitchell was a flamboyant Washington socialite whose husband was embroiled in the Watergate scandal. Her shocking claims of a "dirty... Read More
Outbreaks during World War II and the Korean War were likely linked to activities like digging trenches. Read More
By cracking the enigma codes, the work of British code breakers at Bletchley Park foiled the German U-boat threat. Read More
Even Calvin Coolidge made mistakes. He made two after being elected president in his own right in 1924. Both mistakes related—one... Read More
It’s where the British perfected their system of enslaved labor, George Washington visited and colonialism’s legacy can still... Read More
Nearly 500 years ago, a Moroccan man walked thousands of miles from Florida to the Pacific Coast, becoming the first known outsider to see... Read More
How the BFI saved and restored a remarkable film by cutting-edge Australian cinematographer Frank Hurley, captured from rigging and ice... Read More
Without intervention, the important surviving physical evidence and the opportunity for commemoration will be lost. Read More
On 31 May 1786 Paris relished the humiliation of Marie Antoinette as the Affaire du collier de la reine concluded in court. Read More
The chariot was used in Chinese warfare from around 1250 BCE but enjoyed its heyday between the 8th and 5th century BCE... Read More
The destruction of Pompeii is one of antiquity’s most famous disasters, but its exact date remains fiercely debated. From pomegranates... Read More
Every continent (other than Antarctica) has been home to ancient civilizations. How well do you know our ancient, global past? Read More
The highs and the lows on the way to modern America. Read More
The Siege of Vicksburg was a pivotal turning point in the Civil War. Should the Union capture the stronghold, the South's hold on the... Read More
Gas. Meat. Flights. Houses. The cost of living is up. Inflation is rearing its head again. And as it rises higher, inflation risks... Read More
What funamentally is the dollar, and who controls it? Read More
Ron Page's son is on a podcast about his father's experiences as a prisoner of the Japanese. Read More
A new movie starring Andrew Scott and Brendan Fraser dramatizes the tense 72 hours before the Allied invasion of Normandy, revealing how... Read More
By organizing weekly gatherings of political leaders and citizens, she proved democracy works best when rivals see one another as human... Read More
The Oscar-winning actor and filmmaker on his new 20-part docuseries, the legacy of 'Saving Private Ryan,' and his vision for America on its... Read More
In National Treasure, Michael Auslin makes the case that the Preamble of the Declaration of Independence remains our best rallying cry for... Read More
Shortly after the war, more than 171,000 remains were returned to the U.S., while next of kin chose to have more than 110,000 buried overseas. Read More
Freeman Johnson is only of only 11 Pearl Harbor attack survivors who are still living. Read More
Every profession has its vices. All too often, historians vainly imagine that they can understand the past more wisely than those who lived... Read More
Scott A Leadingham puts his list in chronological order and it is hard to argue with his first and last choices. Read More
In Norway’s highest mountains, experts are scouring perilous terrain for pieces of the past, long stored in mint condition in ice... Read More
The often fatal virus is believed to have spread from infected animals, likely bats. Read More
Even Calvin Coolidge made mistakes. He made two after being elected president in his own right in 1924. Both mistakes related—one... Read More
When Red Army troops entered Berlin's Jewish Hospital in 1945, they were astonished to discover hundreds of Jews living just a couple of... Read More
Cheering crowds, fast horses, dramatic accidents, and even a little sorcery made up a typical day of chariot racing in Rome as thousands... Read More
The English assumed people they colonized would convert to their way of life, including Protestant Christianity – an assumption reflected... Read More
Merlin, Camelot, the Grail, and the Round Table Read More
Louisville’s Galt House Hotel was an unlikely place for a deadly encounter between two guests, particularly when they were fellow Union... Read More
In the spring of 1258, the clatter of plate armour replaced the hushed tones of diplomacy as a group of defiant barons stormed Westminster... Read More
It took an Irish Gothic novelist to tie up centuries of demonic mythology surrounding the bat with the publication of Bram... Read More
The highs and the lows on the way to modern America. Read More
In Norway’s highest mountains, experts are scouring perilous terrain for pieces of the past, long stored in mint condition in ice patches. As temperatures rise across the world, glacial archaeologists must find the emerging artifacts before they degrade forever... Read More
Shortly after the war, more than 171,000 remains were returned to the U.S., while next of kin chose to have more than 110,000 buried overseas.... Read More
The highs and the lows on the way to modern America.... Read More