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Featured Articles
The Jury on Trial
Author: Hiller B. Zobel
Is trial by jury the essential underpinning of our system of justice or, as more and more critics charge, a relic so flawed that it should perhaps even be abolished? An experienced trial judge examines the historical evidence in the case.
Quantrill’s Bones
Author: Edward E. Leslie
Drawn to the story of the fearsome Confederate raider by a modern act of violence, the author finds a strange epic in the rebel’s restless remains.
The Lady Brakemen
Author: Jocelyn W. Knowles
Consigned to the Pennsylvania Railroad’s “Garbage Run,” they fought their own war on the home front, and they helped shape a victory as surely as their brothers and husbands did overseas.
Who’s Who?
Author: James G. Barber
A historian of American portraits tells how he determines whether a picture is authentic and why that authenticity matters.
The Virgin and the Carburetor
Author: Viola Hopkins Winner
When Henry Adams sought the medieval world in an automobile, this stuffiest of prophets became the first American to sing of the liberating force later celebrated by Jack Kerouac and the Beach Boys.