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Featured Articles

The Ordeal Of Cabeza De Vaca

Author: Thomas F. Mcgann

Marooned on the coast of Texas, he wandered for eight years in a land no European had ever seen

The Mighty Jeep

Author: Dickson Hartwell

Rugged, versatile, and nearly indestructible, this four-wheel substitute for the horse has become one of World War II’s enduring legends

“oh Amherst, Brave Amherst…

Author: Francis Russell

Lord Jeffery’s name is “known to fame,” but it was the five years he spent in America that rescued him from obscurity

Seward’s Wise Folly

Author: Robert L. Reynolds

In Alaska a much-abused Secretary of State saw a fabulous bargain, and what might have been a Russian beachhead became instead our forty-ninth state

“a-h-h B-l-o-o-w-s”

Author: Ivan T. Sanderson

So the lookout’s cry resounded while Yankee whalers roamed the seas. Their perilous, arduous trade spanned three centuries

The Sham Battle Of Manila

Author: Leon Wolff

A Vanished America In Stereo

Author: Lorraine Dexter

Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes asserted “a slight claim on the gratitude of mankind” for inventing a cheap and handy device for viewing three-dimensional photographs. History is still in his debt for the craze he started and the pictures it has left behind

Saint Jane And The Ward Boss

Author: Anne Firor Scott

When Jane Addams opened Hull House for Chicago’s immigrants, she began asking questions a local politician preferred not to answer

Names From The War

Author: Bruce Catton

A Certain Nicholas Of Patara

Author: Duncan Emrich

How folklore, the Reformation, and three inventive New Yorkers turned a dimly known Near Eastern saint into a jolly, secular Santa Claus