News

First built in the 1800s to educate all elementary school children of South Park, Kansas, the two-room schoolhouse is ...
From the Vanderbilts to the 9th Duke of Marlborough, meet the historical socialites, aristocrats, robber barons, and more ...
HBO's "The Gilded Age" has explored what it was like for wealthy Black Americans in the late 1800s in New York City.
Test your knowledge of US voting rights history with our quiz! Explore landmark amendments, key laws, and ongoing challenges ...
Learn about the real people in "The Gilded Age," including J.P. Morgan and Alva Vanderbilt, as the series intertwines history ...
The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act making its way through Congress would eliminate voter suppression, including obstacles to voter registration, reduced polling places and hours, ...
Sculptor Vinnie Bagwell will create a statue of Alexander, honoring the Philly trailblazer’s civil rights legacy.
Pope Leo XIV has decided to declare John Henry Newman a “doctor” of the church, bestowing one of the Catholic Church’s ...
The theme of this year’s event is “America in the 20th Century,” and it will run Aug. 4-8 primarily at Aims Community College ...
Maro Itoje has suggested that he would prefer that the British and Irish Lions keep touring Australia, New Zealand and South ...
Sen. John Barrasso has not yet taken a stand on Safeguard American Voter Eligibility, but Sen. Cynthia Lummis and Rep. Harriet Hageman are all for HR 22, writes Marion Yoder.
The New York Times’s Letters to the Editor column invites a wide range of voices to share their thoughts. Sometimes it fosters real-life connections.