History of Now
Andrew Jackson, America’s Original Anti-Establishment Candidate
The seventh president raged against many of the same machines that are now engulfing this year’s election
When Newspapers Reported on Gun Deaths as "Melancholy Accidents"
A historian explains how a curious phrase used by the American press caught his eye and became the inspiration for his new book
For Susan B. Anthony, Getting Support for Her 'Revolution' Meant Taking on an Unusual Ally
Suffragists Anthony and Cady Stanton found common cause in a wealthy man named George Francis Train who helped to fund their newspaper
The Broadway Revival of "Fiddler" Offers a Profound Reaction to Today's Refugee Crisis
Popular musicals on Broadway are regarded as escapist, but the worldwide issue of migration and displacement is inescapable
The History of the United States’ First Refugee Crisis
Fleeing the Haitian revolution, whites and free blacks were viewed with suspicion by American slaveholders, including Thomas Jefferson
The U.S. Government Turned Away Thousands of Jewish Refugees, Fearing That They Were Nazi Spies
In a long tradition of “persecuting the refugee,” the State Department and FDR claimed that Jewish immigrants could threaten national security
The Train Station That Has Been Housing the World’s Refugees for More Than a Century
Past and present collide at Berlin’s Ostbahnhof
When Franklin Roosevelt Clashed With the Supreme Court—and Lost
Buoyed by his reelection but dismayed by rulings of the justices who stopped his New Deal programs, a president overreaches
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