The President’s goals were clear on the first day of his term, when he issued an executive order overruling the Fourteenth Amendment’s birthright-citizenship clause.
Lexington, Missouri is that rare gem – a riverside town where history isn’t confined to museums but lives and breathes along brick-paved streets and within beautifully preserved buildings. Just an ...
Watching the sun sink into the Gulf from the lighthouse gallery ranks among Florida’s most breathtaking natural spectacles—the sky ignites in hues of orange, pink, and purple, silhouetting distant ...
In November, join us for Revolutionary November as Ken Burns’ The American Revolution brings America’s founding home to the ...
Jeffrey Rosen, lawyer and U.S. Constitution scholar, has written the second book in a series of constitutional contemplations, “The Pursuit of Liberty: How Hamilton vs. Jefferson Ignited the Lasting ...
He never came home. He was 26 years old with a wife and young daughter who would never see him again, never know fully what ...
The Historical Society met Tuesday night. The meeting started with a discussion of the Trail of Tears. Joshua Williams ...
In 1862, jewelry engraver and amateur photographer William H. Mumler was developing a self-portrait in his Boston studio when a ghostly image began to surface. Just below his own image in the photo ...
Discover hidden-gem attractions in Ohio where unexpected beauty, local lore, and a hint of the paranormal combine for ...
A Back Mountain soldier killed during the Civil War finally has a memorial marker recognizing his death after more than 160 ...
Join the Shippensburg Civil War Roundtable Nov. 18 for a talk on Aaron Jerome, Gettysburg’s signalman, presented by historian ...
In 1940 the first Civil War Roundtable was founded in Chicago. The Lehigh Valley’s is named the Civil War Roundtable of ...