Issue


Featured Articles

‘the Scene Of Slaughter Was Exceedingly Picturesque’

Author: Wesley Marx

Trapped in its Baja California breeding lagoons, the gray whale was almost harpooned out of existence. Today the growing herd is faced with a different threat that is perhaps just as dangerous

The President’s Progress

Author: James Thomas Flexner

Washington’s journey to his inauguration resembled a triumphal procession of royalty, but he felt like “a culprit who is going to the place of his execution”

The Trials of Chief Justice Jay

Author: Richard B. Morris

President Washington appointed John Jay to be Chief Justice because the eloquent partisan of the Constitution shared a desire to strengthen the machinery of the central government and to bring about conformity to treaty obligations among the states.

First To Fly The Atlantic

Author: Bernard A. Weisberger

The commander of the NC-4 called the trip “uneventful,” but the men in the other planes of the mission could not quite agree

The Political Machine I: Rise And Fall The Age Of The Bosses

Author: William V. Shannon

They were usually corrupt and often inefficient, but the oldstyle politicians had their uses. Now almost all are gone

The Longest Wait

Author: John Lord

The G.I.’s were far more numerous than any army that ever occupied Britain; none left so little visible trace, none so touching a legacy

The Keeper Of The Key

Author: Milton Sweeney Colweel

“Granther” Sweeney worked on the railroad—and if duty demanded it, he’d rather fight than switch

The Banner Years

Author: David G. Lowe

During World War I Childe Hassam painted New York in all its patriotic glory

“…and The Mound-builders Vanished From The Earth”

Author: Robert Silverberg

What became of the prehistoric race that built the elaborate ceremonial mounds found in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys? Nineteenth-century America had a romantic but self-serving answer