Issue
Featured Articles
The Great Earthquake
Author: Jourdan Houston
When The Great Earthquake struck New England, learned men blamed everything from God’s wrath to an overabundance of lightning rods in Boston. Two hundred and twenty-five years later, geologists are at last discovering the true causes.
The Conundrum Of Corn
Author: Joseph Kastner
It’s our most important, profitable, and adaptable crop—the true American staple. But where did it come from?
Do We Care If Johnny Can Read?
Author: Anthony Brandt
Americans first learned to read to save their souls, then to govern themselves. Now the need is not so clear.
War Correspondent, 1864: The Sketchbooks Of James E. Taylor
Author: Oliver Jensen
When old James E. Taylor exercised his powers of near-total recall to set down memories of the Shenandoah campaign, he left us a unique record of a very new, very hazardous profession
Barataria
Author: Frederick Turner
With astonishing tenacity, the people of the rich river-mouth region of the Mississippi have remained what and where they are through two and a half centuries
Four!
Author: Red Smith
It was fifty years ago that Bobby Jones won his Grand Slam, making him the only man who ever has—or probably ever will—conquer the “Impregnable Quadrilateral” of golf
The America’s Cup Challenge — 1903
Author: Jane Colihan
“They tell me I have a beautiful boat,” said the challenger, Sir Thomas Lipton. “What I want is a boat to lift the Cup.”
Lowell Thomas: “Good Evening, Everybody”
Author: Robert S. Gallagher
American Heritage interviews Lowell Thomas, the journalist whom Damon Runyon described as “the beau ideal of the radio fraternity, first for his complete artistry and second for his personality.