One hundred years ago this month, the “House That Babe Built” became the first true baseball stadium.
The surprise U.S. victory over England in 1950 proved that Americans could also play the beautiful game.
Fighting for labor rights in California's Central Valley, Dolores Clara Fernandez Huerta took up la causa in the name of children.
Born during Jim Crow, Belle da Costa Greene perfected the art of "passing" while working for one of the most powerful men in America.
Written while he was jailed for leading nonviolent demonstrations, King's open letter defined the Civil Rights movement.
It's one of the oldest folk ballads in our national songbook, but where did it come from? The answer is complex, multi-layered, American.
The Museum of Appalachia celebrates simple, honest life in late 19th Century Tennessee.
A founder of the Algonquin Round Table and frequent writer for The New Yorker and Vanity Fair, Benchley influenced generations of humorists from James Thurber to Dave Barry
J.D. Salinger carried a draft of his later-to-be-famous novel with him when he landed on the beach at Normandy.
The answer is complex, confusing, American.
FDR's Secretary of Labor — the first female Cabinet member — also helped create the minimum wage, 40-hour work week, and first tough child labor laws.
“There is no grievance that is a fit object of redress by mob law,” said Abraham Lincoln.
Every country has mail, but only in America is the daily mail part ritual, part Constitutional mandate.
The force behind the early education and social movement—American curiosity—still lives on today.
What the future president learned during a coast-to-coast military motor expedition would later transform America.
As Gen. Granger read the announcement that slavery had ended, the celebration began. The date would go down in history — June nineteenth, soon shortened to Juneteenth.
Republican Sen. Margaret Chase Smith was the first in Congress to stand up to the bullying of Joe McCarthy.
The annual Burning Man Festival in Black Rock City, Nevada, is a week-long binge of festive dress, radical inclusion and pyrotechnic display that has become a spiritual phenomenon.
In what many consider the greatest anti-slavery oration ever given, Frederick Douglass called for “the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake”
In history’s long parade of military heroes, few can rival Sergeant Alvin C. York
After assassinating President Garfield, a lunatic gunman mounted an insanity defense, which the jury--and the nation--rejected despite compelling evidence to the contrary
Although marred by the grisly murders of three young activists, the Freedom Summer of 1964 brought revolutionary changes to Mississippi and the nation