Excerpts

Curated stories from around the web.
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Henry David Thoreau

On Henry David Thoreau’s Ultimate Instrument of Perception, the “Kalendar”

Exploring Henry David Thoreau's meticulous track of natural phenomena.
Death Bed of Lincoln
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This Republic of Suffering

The enormous scale of death in the Civil War, and how it altered the American way of dying.
Decoration Day stage with flags and bunting.
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Representing the Dead

The hosts discuss the history of American war memorials.
A movie still from Scarface (1932) depicting members of the mafia.

Mob Rules

The Chicago Outfit’s second life as nostalgia—and as presidential politics.
Photo of Norman Podhoretz

The Longest Journey Is Over

With the death of Norman Podhoretz at 95, the transition from New York’s intellectual golden age to the age of grievance and provocation is complete.
Ernest Hardman in studio

How Detroit Became a Hub for Black Art

A decade before the mainstream Black Arts Movement, Detroit underwent a transformation of its own.
Ely S. Parker

Ely Parker’s Ambivalent Legacy

On U.S.-American Indian treaty-making and Ely Parker's role in its abolition.
Ken Burns

No, Ken Burns, the United States Is Not an Iroquois Nation

The Founders didn’t model us on the Six Nations, and George Washington didn’t tomahawk a Frenchman.
The unveiling of the statue of Barbara Rose Johns

Statue of Black Teen Replaces Robert E. Lee at U.S. Capitol

Barbara Rose Johns was only 16 when she led a walkout in 1951 to protest horrendous conditions at her segregated high school in rural Virginia.
Black women at an abolitionist meeting, from the book cover of "Dissenting Forces"
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Disruptive to Society

In the 1830s, college students protested slavery. Many colleges and elites wanted them to stop. 
Speaker of the NY State Assembly Stanley Steingut in 1975

New York City’s Forgotten Public Bank Plan

Lessons from a 1975 proposal for a state-owned public bank.
Map of the frontier of the Northern Colonies in mid 1700s.

The New Dominion: Virginia's Bounty Land

In 1774 Virginia surveyors risked frontier war to claim western lands for veterans, exposing land hunger, imperial ambition, and Native conflict.
African Americans walk to boycott the segregated bus system in Birmingham, Alabama.

What We Get Wrong About the Montgomery Bus Boycott – and What We Can Learn from It

The movement’s success was never a given. It took much longer and required tremendous sacrifice without certainty it would work
Stevie Ray Vaughan and David Bowie

When Bowie Met Vaughan

The brief creative collision of two superstars.
Cover for 'The Magic Fern' by Phillip Bonosky.

Phillip Bonosky’s Fight for the Working Class

Born in the Mon Valley, Bonosky transformed from a devout Catholic into a committed Communist writer, chronicling the struggles of working-class immigrants.
Screenshot of a family hug from 'It's a Wonderful Life'

When 'It's a Wonderful Life' Came Under FBI Scrutiny

During the Red Scare, a 1947 FBI report alleged the beloved holiday film contained subtly subversive anti-American propaganda.
Disability rights demonstrators, some in wheelchairs, one with a seeing-eye dog
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How Activists Fought for Rights for People With Disabilities, and Made Them the Law

The long struggle for the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Water and ice

‘Cadillac Desert’ Reconsidered

Reflections on the book and lessons for the present environmental movement.
Directors Sarah Botstein and Ken Burns look at a bust of George Washington

Ken Burns’s Wake-Up Call

Ken Burns’s newest docuseries may have its shortcomings, but others looking to tell the story of the Founding could learn from his attention to detail.
Grave markings for Jane Austen

Happy Birthday, Jane!

A survey of recent Austen-related books and artworks to celebrate the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth.
Teddy Roosevelt on a horse in front of a Yellowstone National Park map background.

The Groundbreaking Political Legacy of Theodore Roosevelt

Roosevelt’s popularity, charisma, and progressive politics.
Reclaiming Clio Book Cover.
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To Tell the Whole Story

The high-stakes struggle to make women’s history visible to all Americans.
Gillette print advertisement, 1932, showing unemployed man who hasn't shaved.

Things Fall Apart: Herbert Hoover And The Risks Of Certitude

On the rhetoric and failure of the Hoover administration.
A report for the Maryland Board of Claims in 1864.

Compensated Emancipation in Maryland During the Civil War

How promises of compensation for Black enlistment helped push Maryland toward ending slavery.
An artificial Christmas tree

Augmenting Christmas: Artificial Trees and the Lure of Perpetual Nature

From aluminum to plastic, the evolution of artificial Christmas trees reveal our desires for safer, cleaner, “better” nature and modern convenience.
William Goodell in a suit.

William Goodell and the Science of Human Rights

William Goodell was praised by Frederick Douglass for being among the most important opponents of slavery in his time.
Illustration of Kim Kardashian taking a selfie with drawn-on glasses and hat to resemble James Joyce.

James Joyce, Like Kim Kardashian, Understood a Sex Scandal Could Be Good for Business

'Blank Space' and 'A Danger to the Minds of Young Girls' examine capitalism and the arts in different eras.
Chief Justice John Roberts

John Roberts and the Cynical Cult of Federalist No. 70

Alexander Hamilton’s treatise on executive power is one of the conservative legal movement’s favorite texts to quote—and misquote.
Newspaper advertisement offering enslaved young men for hire.
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Slaves for Hire

On the phenomenon of “hiring out” enslaved persons prior to the Civil War, and how this introduced some slaves to the world of wages.
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The Historians Behind Ken Burns' "The American Revolution"

Three experts discuss their behind-the-scenes experience as historical advisers to the new series.
A collage of censored obscenities and the front page of the Dartmouth Review.

Before Trump, and Before the Young Republicans, There Was the Dartmouth Review

Long before Trump, a group of Dartmouth students weaponized outrage and satire to seize the spotlight.
Salem MA Postcard of a witch riding a broom

Salem's Absent Witches

Historical and even pop culture references to the source of the town's fame are drowned out by a more generic Halloween ambience.
Dinkytown minimum wage march-Raise the minimum wage protesters at a McDonalds restaurant
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The Birth of the Minimum Wage

On the legal background to the federal minimum wage, established by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
Collage of John Roberts, Ronald Reagan, and a voting booth.

John Roberts’s Dream Is Finally Coming True

The chief justice has been working to neuter the Voting Rights Act since the beginning of his career.
"A City of Fantasy" painting from the mid 19th century
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The First Futurists and the World They Built

From Saint-Simon to Silicon Valley, the urge to forecast the future has always masked a struggle over who gets to define it.
New Deal painting "Reconstruction and the Well-Being of the Family" by Philip Guston (1942)

Can the “Sistine Chapel of the New Deal” Be Saved From Trump?

Precious murals by Ben Shahn, Philip Guston, and others are even more endangered than we knew.
Cardboard cutouts of Donald Trump Ronald Reagan.

How the Republican Party Slipped Its Leash

The Republican Party’s descent into chaos is a product of capitalist fragmentation.
Joseph Stalin, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Winston Churchill.

The Diplomatic Battle to Win World War II

Defeating the Nazi war machine necessitated not just military might, but also skillful diplomacy.
Man setting out a placard, on the cover of the book "Make Your Own Job"

Make Your Own Job

A new book examines Americans' long obsession with the enticing and oppressive concept of entrepreneurship.
A room in Monticello.

Jefferson Divided

Though his writings grappled with the contradiction between bondage and liberty, Thomas Jefferson’s life was indebted to those he enslaved.
Jane Addams

Women's Work

How a century of undervaluing women’s labor echoes in policy today.
Thyra J. Edwards

An Antifascist Education

Black women’s radicalism has been fascism’s enemy for 200 years.
A port city in the 1600s.

Sven Beckert’s Chronicle of Capitalism’s Long Rise

Capitalism is a global economic system, so a proper chronicle of its rise to dominance has to examine the entire world.
Martin Wong, The Flood (1984)

FIREstorm

A conversation on the wave of landlord perpetrated arson in the Bronx during the 1970s.
Sullen boy and girl illustration from a 1926 Good Housekeeping article.

Questioning Parental Divorce: The Surprising Origins of a Contentious Debate

The century-long debate over whether parental divorce harms or helps children.
Portrait of Benjamin Franklin (1777) holding a book.

A Republic, If We Can Afford It

The framers of the United States Constitution envisoned economic discipline that they thought was a requirement for a republic to endure.
Jean and Joseph McCarthy reading the Daily Worker.

McCarthyism Is Back. You Can Thank This Woman.

History has overlooked the real architect of Joe McCarthy’s purges: his wife.
Two surviving menstrual pads from the 1850s

Padding Out History: Menstrual Management in the Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century

How mobile and working women managed menstruation in the nineteenth and early twentieth century.
Images of Lilli from the February 1956 cover of Spielzeug Export

My Search for Barbie’s Aryan Predecessor

The original doll was not made by Mattel but by a business that perfected its practice making plaster casts of Hitler.
Lee Atwater

Southern Strategies

You're misreading Lee Atwater’s infamous “southern strategy” quote as a confession.
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