U.S. History

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The History of the Doughnut

A look back at the men, women and machines that made America’s favorite treat possible

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Singing Our Praises

With creativity and a vast collection, the Smithsonian has become a leader in preserving our musical heritage

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The Long Good-bye

In which it is argued that a look at the history of divorce may make you feel better about our own scandalous ways

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Remember The Maine

It has been more than a century since the storied dreadnought sank, but controversy has not yet abandoned the ship

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In Honor of Struggle

Life came hard for people like historian Lonnie Bunch's ancestors; he strives to commemorate them

Edith Wilson

A Symbol That Failed

In 1918, a hopeful France gave Mrs. Wilson a peace brooch, but peace eluded her husband and the world

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Museum Networking

Whether at the Nobel Prize awards or at the opening of the new Getty center, the Smithsonian has a vital role

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Stamps,— What an Idea!

New commemoratives look like our first stamps, which were slow to catch on in 1847

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The ACLU Defends Everybody

Its clients have ranged from Muhammad Ali to Oliver North, but its real allegiance is to the Bill of Rights

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Little Brother of War

Lacrosse sticks were tools of the trade in a rugged Indian game now growing popular around the world

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Joseph Henry's Legacy

A man of science and compromise, the Smithsonian's first Secretary laid the foundation for success

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The Long Walk to Bosque Redondo

Officials called it a reservation, but to the conquered and exiled Navajos it was a wretched prison camp

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Symbolically Speaking

Smithsonian’s Museum Support Center in Suitland, Maryland

A Real "Nation's Attic"

It's a place with a two-foot-wide "dead zone," a "wet" pod and a refrigerated room for the garbage

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Langley's Feat--and Folly

The Smithsonian Secretary assembled a devoted team, a remarkable engine and a plane that wouldn't fly

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Pipelines to the Public

Through innovative outreach programs, the Smithsonian extends its resources far and wide

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Signs of the Times

Autographs of luminaries —from Lincoln to Liberace —feed the yen for nostalgia and a brush with fame

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Pushing the Envelope

At the National Postal Museum, envelopes are as critical a part of history as the letters inside

Photograph of cased-daguerreotype studio portrait of brain-injury survivor Phineas P. Gage (1823–1860) shown holding the tamping iron which injured him.

Facing a Bumpy History

The much-maligned theory of phrenology gets a tip of the hat from modern neuroscience

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Two Cultures--Never the Twain Shall Meet?

Scientists wonder why today the word "Intellectual" is used to describe only those in arts and letters

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