Excerpts

Curated stories from around the web.
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From "Man upon the sea" by Frank B. Goodrich.

The True Story of the Sperm Whale That Sank the Whale-Ship ‘Essex’ and Inspired ‘Moby-Dick’

Survivors of the whale attack drifted at sea for months, succumbing to starvation, dehydration—and even cannibalism.
AFL-CIO headquarters.

Blue Collar Empire

The AFL-CIO’s role in weakening left-wing labor unions around the world, between the 1940s and 1990s.
Charles Horman

Chile in Their Hearts, and Ours

The untold story behind the killings of two Americans by the Chilean military after the coup.
Author Julian Aguon as a child with his family.

Blessed Is the Spot

In a militarized territory like Guam, everything is political, even cancer.
African Americans, including children, gathered in front of a barracks building.
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Not So Safe Space

How disease devastated populations of escaped slaves in contraband camps behind Union lines during and after the Civil War.

Making Sense of Sylvia Plath’s Final Act

Plath felt that marriage and children were the necessary but insufficient condition of her continued creativity.
Friedrich A. Hayek gold coin

Goldbugs

How a fringe libertarian belief in monetary collapse inspired a 1970s literature of survivalism.
“Self-Portrait” by Chaim Soutine, 1918.

How a Philly Businessman Changed the Life of an “Unsellable” Expressionist Artist

On Albert Barnes’ massive acquisition of Chaim Soutine's artworks in the early 1900s.
Thomas Paine alongside the front cover of "Common Sense"

Thomas Paine, Common Sense and a Plan for America

The constitutional ideas in Thomas Paine's famous pamphlet.
Robert H. Jackson

Reintroducing Justice Robert Jackson

The complex justice whose Youngstown concurrence continues to influence debates over executive power.
Birds-eye view of water park in Wisconsin Dells.

How the Wisconsin Dells Turned Nature Into the Ultimate Indoor Destination

What the rise of the “Waterpark Capital of the World” means for its namesake riverscape.
Jewish congregation from Florida.

The Jewish Revolutionaries of Key West

In the last years of the 19th century, Jews inspired by the fight for Cuban independence joined the fray.
A handheld calculator.

From Segments To Pixels

Handheld calculators saw a massive amount of innovation in the 1970s—thanks in no small part to LCD screens and a primitive form of typography.
Dr. Paul Popenoe, director of the Institute of Family Relations, speaks in support of the practice of eugenics.
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Can This Marriage Be Saved?

On the links between the rise of marriage counseling and the scientific embrace of eugenics.
Richard Nixon

Escalating the Escalation

A short history of the long war on drugs in Latin America from Richard Nixon to Donald Trump.
Malcolm Cowley

The Man Who Helped Make the American Literary Canon

In the early twentieth century, America's literature seemed provincial until Malcolm Cowley championed writers like Kerouac and Faulkner as distinctly American.
Close up photo of Pecan Pie.

How Pecans Went From Ignored Trees to a Holiday Staple – The 8,000-year History

Pecans are a truly American nut: They grew on George Washington’s estate, and they flew to space on an Apollo mission.
Workers for the Insular Lumber company felling a small Almon
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The Mythical Mahogany that Helped Build the American Empire

How “Philippine mahogany” became America’s tropical timber of choice, thanks to a rebrand from a colonial logging company that drove deforestation.
Aftermath of the Park Avenue Tunnel Crash

How New York’s Grand Central Terminal Helped Provide the Blueprint for American Cities by Accident

A train wreck that caused the death of more than a dozen commuters was the impetus behind a monumental project that changed the urban landscape.
Edmund Fitzgerald ship on the water.

What the Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald Can Teach Us Fifty Years Later

Fitzgerald sank in a 1975 storm; Lightfoot’s song made it iconic. The wreck came to symbolize the Midwest’s industrial decline.

The Politics of Humiliation

The liberal jeremiad warns that democracy is fragile, institutions must be defended, and that vigilance is the price of liberty.
Drawing of Yale University, from likely the 17th century.

Reckoning With Yale’s Ties to Slavery

An institutional history of the “peculiar institution.”
William Lloyd Garrison.

From William Lloyd Garrison to Tolstoy, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr.

There has been a long history of nonviolent resistance in the United States, from William Lloyd Garrison to Martin Luther King Jr.
Demonstrators express support for Robert Mapplethorpe's art in Cincinnati, April 1990.

Return of the Repressors

On the culture wars of the late 1980s and ’90s.
Painting of a colonial battle in Africa.

No War Is Too Small: How Localized Conflicts Sparked Imperial Violence

Small wars have been used as a foundation of global order. The belief that limited violence preserves peace serves imperial control.
Photograph from the film Paper Moon

Paper Moon: Partners in Crime

On the making of one of Hollywood's iconic child characters.
Stephen Shore's photo of Beverly Boulevard and La Brea Avenue gas stations and cars in 1971.

Latent Climate Crisis in Stephen Shore's Photographs

Fifty years later, two iconic photographs of Los Angeles from 1975 contain our present moment.
The Parcae satellite over the earth.

A Spy Satellite You’ve Never Heard of Helped Win the Cold War

The Parcae project revolutionized electronic eavesdropping.
David Einhorn and Morris Raphall and a paper saying "Rabbis Battled for Abolition."

American Pharaohs

A new book doesn’t aim to skewer Jewish defenders of slavery or celebrate Jewish abolitionists, but to understand them, warts and all.
New York City at night.

Four Centuries of the City that Never Sleeps

“Whether or not Heraclitus was right that you can’t step into the same river twice, you certainly can’t return to the same New York.”
Children watch as a house is bulldozed in West Oakland

Archiving Oakland

Two scholars discuss activism from the era of the Model Cities Program to the present, and consider the preservation of “illegitimate” histories for future use.
Book Cover of "Gems of American History"

Making History Great Again

How and why Walter A. McDougall's representation of history differs from the standard narrative, especially regarding the Wilson administration.
Althea Gibson holding her tennis racket at the London airport.

Ahead of the Game

Althea Gibson, one of the great tennis players of the twentieth century, made segregation in her sport untenable.
Spectators watch the Atlanta Crackers play at Ponce de Leon Park. Postcard from 1915.

“Cobb Out Front in Bid for Stadium”: Professional Baseball and the Rise of Suburbia, 1957-1962

Leaders in Cobb county pushed a huge stadium plan in the late ’50s to lure teams and suburban growth, but funding, leagues, and politics stalled it.
Ken Burns and Sarah Botstein

“A Story We Think We Know”: Ken Burns on The American Revolution

Burns and co-director Sarah Botstein discuss their six-part, 10-year labor of love, which finally makes it to PBS on November 16.
Police officers on Alabama Street in Atlanta, Georgia.

Stop Cop City’s Deep Roots

For 150 years, Atlanta has endured racist policing that has served the interest of the city’s economic elite. The fight to resist this goes back just as far.
A mural of Milton S. Hershey, the founder of The Hershey Company.

What Hershey’s Century-Old Philanthropy Reveals About OpenAI’s New $130 Billion Foundation

The parallels between two American nonprofits that control major for-profit corporations.
Ronald Reagan; soldiers marching.

State Department Erases 15 Pages of Nuclear History — With No Warning

Key historical records about the incident during the Reagan administration, known as the Able Archer 83 War Scare, were removed without explanation.
Illustration by Anna Ruch, featuring founder Thomas Jefferson.

Tell Students the Truth About American History

We owe it to Americans of all ages to be honest about the country’s past, including its contradictions.
Washington as a freemason Commander of the American Army, 1775, President of the United States, 1789, Initiated, November 4th 1752, in Fredericksburg, Lodge No. 4, Virginia. Passed, March 3rd 1753 Raised, August 4th 1753 /
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Power to the People

On the first political convention in support of the Anti-Masonic Party, in reaction to the number of political elites involved in the secretive Masonic society.
Illustration of a baby chewing on the cord of an old candlestick telephone.

Teething Babies and Rainy Days Once Cut Calls Short

“Trouble men” searched for water damage in early analog telephones.
Cypress Hills, Saskatchewan, Canada.

Exceptional Policing: American perspectives on the Cypress Hills Massacre

Bringing historical perspective to the current moment of nationalism redux and US-Canada border complexity.
Pink maragine smeared on bread.

You Could Go to Jail for Selling This Now-Ubiquitous Food

In the 19th and 20th centuries, margarine defied the odds—surviving federal regulations, industry smear campaigns, and even a bizarre mandate to dye it pink.
A WTO protest banner in front of the Space Needle in Seattle.

When Trade Was at a Crossroads

When the WTO gathered in Seattle in 1999, protests erupted. Their strategy offers a model for resisting globalization at a time of renewed urgency.
An abstact piece of a naked blue woman and a cage.

Abortion’s Long History

Abortion has been an inescapable fact of life for millennia. So why do women gain or lose control over their reproductive lives at different times in history?
Title card of the U.S. as a pie chart with photos of immigrants.

Mapping Deportations

Unmasking the history of racism in U.S. immigration enforcement.
Charles Oldrieve's photo and newspaper articles about his journey.

In 1907, This Daring Performer Walked on Water From Cincinnati to New Orleans

Charles Oldrieve used custom-made wooden shoes to float on the water’s surface and propel himself forward.
The Jefferson Memorial, with storm clouds outside, and light from within.

How Jefferson’s Words Were Doctored in his Memorial

A great-great-grandson pushed to portray Jefferson as an abolitionist, leaving a misleading impression about his actions on equality and slavery.
The Pittsburgh skyline with a pile of trash in the foreground, 1974.

The EPA's '70s Documerica Series Is Beautiful and Still Urgent

Photographs that show "a country of people made rich at the expense of the environment, but seeing the richness spoiled by a world they’ve destroyed."
Atlantic Monthly title page from the 1850s.

Doomscrolling in the 1850s

"The Atlantic" was born in an era of information overload.
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