Issue


Featured Articles

Remembering Neil Armstrong

Author: Richard Truly

The first man to set foot on the Moon 50 years ago this summer is remembered by his friend and colleague, a former astronaut and administrator at NASA.

Light-Horse Harry's Tragic Fight for Freedom of the Press

Author: Ryan Cole

In the bitter debate over the War of 1812, the decorated veteran nearly died fighting a Baltimore mob in defense of an unpopular Federalist publisher.

“Let Us Die to Make Men Free”

Author: Richard M. Gamble

Tears ran down the cheeks of Abraham Lincoln when he heard the “Battle Hymn of the Republic” sung in Congress in 1864 by a chaplain who had survived a Confederate prison. It would become the most famous literary production of the Civil War.

Original “Cricket Clicker” Found for 75th Anniversary of D-Day

Author: Edwin S. Grosvenor

Authentic brass “crickets” issued to American paratroopers on D-Day are now quite rare. A worldwide search recently “unearthed a lost piece of sound history.”

“What, to the American Slave, Is the Fourth of July?”

Author: Bruce Watson

In what many consider the greatest anti-slavery oration ever given, Frederick Douglass called for “the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake.”

Best Memoirs of the Great War

Author: Edward G. Lengel

A leading historian of World War I picks the best accounts of the war among the hundreds he's consulted in his research.

McCullough's "The Pioneers"

Author: Edwin S. Grosvenor

David McCullough’s latest book tells the story of a small group of Revolutionary War veterans and pioneers who set out on an extraordinary 800-mile journey through the wilderness to establish the first settlement in the Ohio Territory. 

Rediscovering Hand-Drawn Maps from the American Revolution and the Duke Who Collected Them

Author: Edwin S. Grosvenor

A team from American Heritage helped document some of the most important maps of the Revolution — still stored in the medieval English castle where scenes from Harry Potter were later filmed.

Slideshow of Apollo 11 Photos

Author: Matthew Palatnik

Building the Transcontinental Railroad

Author: Edwin S. Grosvenor

Completed 150 years ago this month, the railroad's construction was one of the great dramas in American history, and led to a notorious scandal.