On Sept. 30, 1941, Thomas Jefferson’s great-great grandson joined six other men for a private meeting at a Washington art gallery. The... Read More
The rule that no president can serve more than two full terms became part of the U.S. Constitution in 1951, after President Franklin D.... Read More
Kamala Harris' memoir reveals Biden's team seems to have forgotten the most important thing about running mates. Read More
He found the Third Reich leaders all sane. Read More
When U.N. forces famously stormed ashore at Inchon on September 15, 1950, General Douglas MacArthur’s gamble set in motion a rapid advance... Read More
The British Expeditionary Force enjoyed a “holiday” in France during the Phony War, but the day of reckoning came on May 10, 1940 at... Read More
The release of WWII-era military documents this year has given a boost to researchers digging into Japan's germ warfare program. Japan's... Read More
The Potsdam Conference, held from 17 July to 2 August 1945 in Potsdam in eastern Germany, decided how the Allies would deal with a defeated... Read More
Richard Burton, born 100 years ago this month, was famously married - twice - to Elizabeth Taylor. In 1966, a BBC interview with them saw a... Read More
John Maynard Keynes’s prescient warning Read More
Scotland’s short-lived, catastrophic Central American colony exposed its precarious relationship with England. Was closer union an... Read More
This past Friday was Halloween and we here at HR&R hope that everyone had a spooky holiday, with the familiar parade of bats, ghosts, and... Read More
Here are some of the most severe droughts in American history and their impact on the country’s landscape, economy, and approach to water... Read More
Holding More than Virtue in Common Read More
The highs and the lows on the way to modern America. Read More
Pumpkins, trick or treating and ghost stories are what we associate with Halloween, but what about turnips, fairies and a fortune-telling... Read More
Zara Anishanslin joins us to uncover the hidden world of artists, artisans, and makers who painted, stitched, and crafted the Revolution into... Read More
Did the Trojan War – the ten year, cosmic clash between the Greeks and the Trojans, featuring the Olympian gods, kings and heroes... Read More
The word "genocide" can seem like it’s everywhere right now: So it can be easy to forget that, fundamentally, it's a legal term that... Read More
Burns’s 12-hour documentary about our national origin story is landing in the middle of a culture war. Yes, it’s complicated. No,... Read More
The Nazi high command was put on trial 80 years ago in 1945. The new film Nuremberg draws on a little-known detail of the tribunal to ask... Read More
How Amanda Vaill gave Eliza and Angelica Schuyler their due. Read More
What drives Trump’s politics is nostalgia for the age of coal, when dirty fuel and no environmental regulations created his version of a... Read More
Before it became home to the U.S. Military Academy, the perch on the Hudson River was the most important strategic po... Read More
Navy saw a need for beach landings in WWII, it began an elite Special Warfare force. Read More
From 1951 to 1959, the FBI and Air Force ran Operation Washtub, a covert program that trained bush pilots, trappers, hunters and miners to... Read More
Inside the glass were cheerful letters written in pencil by Privates Malcolm Neville, 27, and William Harley, 37, dated Aug. 15, 1916. Read More
Over the course of four years, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist spoke with dozens of elite military personnel about misconduct in... Read More
By the end of the Seven Years’ War in 1763 Britain had become a global power. However, the conflict’s colossal expense and the... Read More
The government has shut down 21 times since 1977, and Congress is still breaking records for the longest fiscal standoffs. Read More
From the Trail of Tears to Watergate to the Iraq War, here are 20 of the worst presidential mistakes in US history — and what actually... Read More
U.S. elections are generally decided at the ballot box. Occasionally, there are elections where things run so close that it Read More
In 1974, the U.S. tried staying on daylight saving time all year. The result was darker mornings and public panic. Read More
John Maynard Keynes’s prescient warning Read More
“I Have Loved You” is the English translation of Pope Leo XIV’s exhortation to almsgiving. But what does it mean to love... Read More
See iconic images of the Statue of Liberty from the Smithsonian Magazine Photo Contest Read More
The classical world boasted many sophisticated civilizations, ruled from impressive cities. Discover the 10 most impressive ancient cities... Read More
The highs and the lows on the way to modern America. Read More
The classical world boasted many sophisticated civilizations, ruled from impressive cities. Discover the 10 most impressive ancient cities from the ancient world.... Read More
Navy saw a need for beach landings in WWII, it began an elite Special Warfare force.... Read More
U.S. elections are generally decided at the ballot box. Occasionally, there are elections where things run so close that it... Read More