Story

Special Issue: What Made America Great

AH article image

Authors: Edwin S. Grosvenor

Historic Era:

Historic Theme:

Subject:

Winter 2026 | Volume 71, Issue 1

American Heritage Winter 2026
American Heritage Winter 2026

Welcome to the largest issue of American Heritage ever published! We will be adding essays over the next weeks.

A year ago, we debated what to do for the magazine's 75th Anniversary. Given the widespread confusion about what our nation stands for, we decided to go back to basics, to remind readers of some of the values, principles, and accomplishments that in fact “Made America Great.”

The need is obvious. Today, the United States faces real threats around the world, and we need citizens and allies that believe in what America stands for. As Benjamin Franklin told the Declaration signers 250 years ago, “We must all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.”

Walter Isaacson echoed Franklin in his recent book, The Greatest Sentence Ever Written. “How can we hang together,” he asked, “when there are so many forces dedicated to dividing us? One way is by reflecting on our fundamental principles.” 

It seems a simple question, what makes America great? But the answer is frustratingly complex. Where to begin?

We came to a similar conclusion when deciding what theme to focus on for this 75th Anniversary issue. Our nation needs to continue to provide an example, to build on what so many have contributed to over the last 250 years.

American Heritage was founded five years after the end of World War II, just as the Cold War was heating up. The Soviet Union had tested their first atomic bomb and Communists were consolidating their strangle hold on mainland China. There was a real need for leadership and moral clarity, to provide an alternative to authoritarianism.

Clio, the muse of history, has warned us repeatedly that only fools do not learn her lessons, at great cost and peril. Cleveland Museum of Art
Clio, the muse of history, warns us that only fools do not heed her lessons, at great peril and cost. Cleveland Museum of Art

So an extraordinary collection of historians and leaders of historical societies got together to launch American Heritage

“What is needed in America today is a new appreciation and understanding of our American heritage and its advantages over the ways of totalitarianism and dictatorship,” the publishers wrote as their mission in the first issue.

Allen Nevins, longtime Chairman of our Editorial Advisory Committee, also observed in that first issue that there was a real need for “a renewal of our most precious possession, faith in the national ideal.” (Nevins was a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize for history.)

“The age of our country’s achievement is not ended but only just begun,” wrote playwright Robert Sherwood in American Heritage.

We have heeded their words, and in this anniversary issue turned to look at American fundamentals. We asked over two dozen leading historians to help us remind readers of the insights of our Founding Fathers, the expansion of the American ideal by Andrew Jackson and