Issue
Featured Articles
“But Don’t Go Near The Water”
Author:
Essay: One-way Ticket To Oblivion
Author: Peter Lyon
The Great Red Scare
Author: Allan L. Damon
In 1919 the U.S. Attorney General swooped down on a alleged Bolshevik revolutionaries and deported them by the boatload. For a while he was a national hero; he dreamed of the White House. But then…
An Artist Draws The Line
Author: Robert V. Hine
In 1850 John Russell Bartlett set out to draw up—and draw—a border between the United States and Mexico. He put up with an infernal wilderness, fractious colleagues, and a damsel ungrateful for his chivalry, but he left a rich legacy of art
The Perils Of Evangelina
Author: Wilbur Cross
Being the thrilling account ot the capture, imprisonment, and rescue of one of history’s loveliest P.O.W.’s, and of how her plight kept the New York presses—and their editors—humming
Love & Marriage
Author:
Though some today might be inclined to call it Love and Mirage, Currier & Ives’ idealised view of the tender process was the popular one in the days when all suitors were expected to see the importance of being earnest, and when all chased young ladies were, of course, chaste
Is This Any Way To Ruin A Railroad?
Author: Peter Lyon
You bet it is, say the railway moguls, who in fifty years almost managed to get rid of the “passenger element.” Then a freshman senator derailed them with a plan to keep the clay coaches rolling
The Bonins—isles Of Contention
Author: Gavan Daws
Americans settled early on the tiny, strategic Pacific islands, and dominate them again today. But the Japanese want them back
The World Of John Jay
Author: The Editors
The Jay Papers I: Mission To Spain
Author: Richard B. Morris