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The Middle Hutchinson: Elisha, 1641-1717
By leading the risky but eventually successful financial operation, Elisha justified his name.
by
Dror Goldberg
via
Commonplace
on
April 4, 2023
Spurious Quotations
The following is a list of quotations misattributed to George Washington that have been sent to the Mount Vernon Library in recent years.
via
Mount Vernon
How Reading “The Economist” Helped Me to Stop Worrying About White Supremacy
A recent viral sensation identifies the migration of poor whites as the cause of the problem—letting the rest of us off the hook!
by
Sarah Taber
via
The Nation
on
April 21, 2023
The Chicago Evangelist Who Held a Gospel Revival To Stop a Strike
Dwight L. Moody and the 1884 Haymarket Affair offer a look at what happens when Christians side with the wealthy instead of working class.
by
Matt Bernico
via
Sojourners
on
April 28, 2023
Martin Luther King Was a Law Breaker
On the second anniversary of MLK's assassination, political prisoner Martin Sostre wrote a tribute emphasizing his radical disobedience.
by
Austin McCoy
,
Martin Sostre
via
Martin Sostre Institute
on
April 1, 1970
partner
Michigan Repealed Its ‘Right-to-Work’ Law, a Victory for Organized Labor
Labor activists can learn from the decades-long campaign to undermine their influence by focusing on state-level action to bolster their cause.
by
Jennifer Standish
via
Made By History
on
May 1, 2023
The Banana King Who (Tried to) Put People Over Profits
1970s United Fruit CEO Eli Black got caught between the warring ideals of ‘social responsibility’ and shareholder gains.
by
Matt Garcia
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
April 26, 2023
A Fire Started in Waco. Thirty Years Later, It’s Still Burning.
Behind the Oklahoma City bombing and even the January 6th attack was a military-style assault in Texas that galvanized the far right.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
The New Yorker
on
May 1, 2023
The Making of Jackie Kennedy
As a student in Paris and a photographer at the Washington Times-Herald, the future First Lady worked behind the lens to bring her own ideas into focus.
by
Thomas Mallon
via
The New Yorker
on
May 1, 2023
Reading, Race, and "Robert's Rules of Order"
The book was an especially formal response to the complications of white supremacy, segregated democracy, and civil war.
by
Kent Puckett
via
Public Books
on
April 28, 2023
“H.H.C.”: The Story of a Queer Life—Glimpsed, Lost, and Finally Found
My hunt for one man across the lonely expanse of the queer past ended in a place I never expected.
by
Aaron Lecklider
via
Slate
on
April 24, 2023
Smile, You're on Jury Duty!
First came 'Candid Camera.' Then 'The Truman Show.' Now, a new swath of TV speaks to 21st-century voyeurism.
by
Jackie Mansky
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
April 28, 2023
Calle de los Negros: L.A.'s "Forgotten" Street
How did Calle de los Negros get its name? And why did the city raze it in 1887?
by
William D. Estrada
via
KCET
on
October 21, 2017
The Great Alcohol Health Flip-Flop Isn’t That Hard to Understand—If You Know Who Was Behind It
More than 30 years ago, the "French paradox" got America bleary-eyed.
by
Tim Requarth
via
Slate
on
April 23, 2023
Remembering New York’s Little Syria
The ethnic enclave in Lower Manhattan was home to refugees fleeing civil war and entrepreneurs taking advantage of a globalizing economy.
by
Ben Railton
via
The Saturday Evening Post
on
April 25, 2023
partner
The 40-Year Path that Left the GOP Unable to Balance the Budget
First, the GOP became the party of tax cuts and now it won't touch entitlements — which makes a balanced budget nearly impossible.
by
Monica Prasad
via
Made By History
on
April 26, 2023
partner
Nose Knows Best
Nasology was a 19th century pseudoscience which claimed to explain personality traits based on the shape of a person’s nose.
via
BackStory
on
July 10, 2015
Portraits of Brotherly Love
Philadelphia portrait studios in the Age of the Daguerreotype (1840-1849).
by
Rachel Wetzel
via
Library of Congress
on
July 1, 2022
How World War I Became the First Modern War of Science
One hundred years ago, a group of U.S. academics and soldiers revolutionized warfare. We’re still seeing the results today.
by
Theo Emery
via
Politico Magazine
on
November 12, 2018
Has Black Lives Matter Changed the World?
A new book makes the case for a more pragmatic anti-policing movement—one that seeks to build working-class solidarity across racial lines.
by
Jay Caspian Kang
via
The New Yorker
on
April 21, 2023
partner
The Crime That Fueled an Asian American Civil Rights Movement
The 1982 attack against Vincent Chin redefined hate crimes and energized a push for today’s stronger legal protections.
via
Retro Report
on
April 26, 2023
How Woke Bob Hope Got Canceled by the Right
The conservative comedian spoke out for gay rights and gun control, and got boycotted and ostracized by friends on the right, including Ronald Reagan.
by
Ben Schwartz
via
The Nation
on
April 14, 2023
What Little Richard Deserved
The new documentary “I Am Everything” explores the gulf between what Richard accomplished and what he got for it.
by
Hanif Abdurraqib
via
The New Yorker
on
April 26, 2023
When Deadly Steamboat Races Enthralled America
Already prone to boiler explosions that regularly killed scores of passengers, steamboats were pushed to their limits in races that valued speed over safety.
by
Greg Daugherty
via
Smithsonian
on
April 26, 2023
partner
The Shameful History of the Lavender Scare Echoes Today
Seventy years after a disgraceful episode of anti-LGTBQ history, we are facing a new wave of McCarthyist fearmongering.
by
David K. Johnson
via
Made By History
on
April 27, 2023
Blundering on the Brink
The secret history and unlearned lessons of the Cuban missile crisis.
by
Vladislav Zubok
,
Sergey Radchenko
via
Foreign Affairs
on
April 3, 2023
American Charivari
The history and context of the made-up aesthetics of the early Ku Klux Klan.
by
Devin Thomas O’Shea
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
April 24, 2023
A Framework to Help Us Understand the World
Out of a common history emerged racism, capitalism, and the whole world. This offers us a clue on how to change that world.
by
Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
via
Hammer & Hope
on
July 26, 2022
The Great American Poet Who Was Named After a Slave Ship
A new biography of Phillis Wheatley places her in her era and shows the ways she used poetry to criticize the existence of slavery.
by
Tiya Miles
via
The Atlantic
on
April 22, 2023
Ned Blackhawk Wants to Unmake the U.S. Origin Story
Professor Blackhawk’s new volume attempts to put Native peoples’ stories at the center of the history of the United States.
by
Ned Blackhawk
,
Rhoda Feng
via
Mother Jones
on
April 24, 2023
The Gift of Slam Poetry
A short history of a misunderstood literary genre and the world it created.
by
Joshua Bennett
via
The Nation
on
April 26, 2023
partner
The Battle of the Suburbs is Back. Will It End Differently?
The lessons of the past for suburban affordable housing advocates.
by
Lily Geismer
via
Made By History
on
April 25, 2023
Is Jimmy Carter Where Environmentalism Went Wrong?
Carter’s austerity was part of a bigger project. It didn’t really have much to do with environmentalism.
by
Kate Aronoff
via
The New Republic
on
April 18, 2023
Nixon Was the Weirdest Environmentalist
Richard Nixon helped establish Earth Day and poured millions of dollars into conservation, despite his own ambivalence about the environmental movement.
by
Liza Featherstone
via
The New Republic
on
April 20, 2023
Charles Dickens, America, & The Civil War
What might Charles Dickens have thought about the American Civil War and the American struggle for abolition and social reforms?
by
Sarah Kay Bierle
via
Emerging Civil War
on
February 23, 2018
partner
Voices from the Oilfields
Using oral histories of early East Texas oil workers, recorded in the 1950s, we hear about the chaos and excess that accompanied the discovery of oil.
via
BackStory
on
January 9, 2015
partner
1973 – The Year That Changed Everything
The story of the oil shocks of 1973 and how they continue to shape the world we live in today.
via
BackStory
on
January 9, 2015
Edith Magonigle and the Art War Relief
Called Art War Relief, members from a group of art societies formed a coalition under the auspices of the American Red Cross.
by
Tal Nadan
via
The New York Public Library
on
July 20, 2017
partner
Making Whiteness
How a historian's family history informed her professional quest to unpack the stories white Southerners told about themselves.
by
In Black America
via
American Archive of Public Broadcasting
on
September 1, 1998
Escaped Nuns
Why some antebellum reformers thought convents were incompatible with "true womanhood."
by
Pete Cajka
,
Cassandra L. Yacovazzi
via
Religion in American History
on
June 17, 2019
The Liberal Discontents of Francis Fukuyama
“The End of History?” was an announcement of victory. But a quarter-century later, its author remains unsure if liberalism truly won.
by
Daniel Bessner
via
The Nation
on
April 17, 2023
partner
The Nixon-Era Roots of Today’s Opioid Crisis
The Nixon administration saw methadone as a way to reduce crime rather than treat addiction.
by
Zoe Adams
via
Made By History
on
April 20, 2023
A Child's Primer for Liberty
Laura Ingalls Wilder's "Little House" series is the best introduction for a child to virtues indispensable to liberty.
by
John O. McGinnis
via
Law & Liberty
on
April 20, 2023
The Origins of Creativity
The concept was devised in postwar America, in response to the cultural and commercial demands of the era. Now we’re stuck with it.
by
Louis Menand
via
The New Yorker
on
April 17, 2023
They Did It for the Clicks
How digital media pursued viral traffic at all costs and unleashed chaos.
by
Aaron Timms
via
The New Republic
on
April 18, 2023
The Cult Roots of Health Food in America
How the Source Family, a radical 1970s utopian commune, still impacts what we eat today.
by
Diana Hubbell
via
Atlas Obscura
on
April 19, 2023
Texas Was Once a Hotbed of Socialism
In the early 1900s heyday of the Socialist Party, Texas boasted a vibrant state party that attracted oppressed farmers in droves.
by
Thomas Alter II
,
Yaseen Al-Sheikh
via
Jacobin
on
April 21, 2023
The Forgotten Drug Trips of the Nineteenth Century
Long before the hippies, a group of thinkers used substances like cocaine, hashish, and nitrous oxide to uncover the secrets of the mind.
by
Claire Bucknell
via
The New Yorker
on
April 17, 2023
Horse Nations
After the Spanish conquest, horses transformed Native American tribes much earlier than historians thought.
by
Andrew Curry
via
Science
on
March 30, 2023
America’s First Plane Bomber, and His Intended Victim
A mass murderer of 1955.
by
Nathan Munn
via
Popula
on
April 5, 2023
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