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Viewing 61–78 of 78 results.
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At the Lower East Side Passover Parade, Immigrants Created New American Identities
Some accounts suggest that the Passover Parade was even more glamorous than its famous counterpart, the Easter Parade.
by
Yael Buechler
via
Forward
on
April 10, 2022
Black Baptists Discover Lost Cemetery in Virginia
African American church graveyards are disappearing. Can they be saved before it’s too late?
by
Nick Tabor
via
Christianity Today
on
February 8, 2022
Read More Puritan Poetry
Coming to love Puritan poetry is an odd aesthetic journey. It's the sort of thing you expect people partial to bowties and gin gimlets to get involved with.
by
Ed Simon
via
The Millions
on
February 4, 2022
How to Tell the Thanksgiving Story on Its 400th Anniversary
Scholars are unraveling the myths surrounding the 1621 feast, which found the Pilgrims and the Wampanoag cementing a newly established alliance.
by
David Kindy
via
Smithsonian
on
November 23, 2021
When Black History Is Unearthed, Who Gets to Speak for the Dead?
Efforts to rescue African American burial grounds and remains have exposed deep conflicts over inheritance and representation.
by
Jill Lepore
via
The New Yorker
on
September 24, 2021
partner
The History Shaping Memorial Services For Fallen Service Members
The way we commemorate those who have made the ultimate sacrifice dates to the Civil War.
by
Jeffrey Allen Smith
via
Made By History
on
September 14, 2021
His Name Was Emmett Till
In 1955, just past daybreak, a Chevrolet truck pulled up to an unmarked building. A 14-year-old child was in the back.
by
Wright Thompson
via
The Atlantic
on
July 22, 2021
After WWI, U.S. Families Were Asked if They Wanted Their Dead Brought Home. Forty Thousand Said Yes.
In May 1921, President Harding paid tribute to a ship carrying 5,000 fallen Americans returned for burial.
by
Michael E. Ruane
via
Washington Post
on
May 30, 2021
Gruesome but Honorable Work
Grieving family members were instrumental in the creation of a federal program to rebury and repatriate the remains of fallen soldiers after World War II.
by
Kim Clarke
via
Perspectives on History
on
May 24, 2021
Confederate Monuments in Cemeteries, Reminders That We Cannot All Rest In Peace
For people of color in particular, cemeteries can be a cruel reminders of trauma both past and present.
by
Sandra Baker
via
Rad Death Blog
on
May 3, 2021
The Things They Buried: Masks, Vials, Social-Distancing Signage — And, of Course, Toilet Paper
Most Americans are eager to forget 2020. But some are making time capsules to make sure future generations remember it.
by
Maura Judkis
via
Washington Post
on
March 25, 2021
New Orleans: Vanishing Graves
Holt Cemetery has been filled to capacity many times over; each gravesite has been used for dozens of burials.
by
Charlie Lee
via
The American Scholar
on
December 7, 2020
Hygeia: Women in the Cemetery Landscape
The Mourning Woman emerged during a revival of classical symbolism in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century gravestone iconography.
by
Corinne Elicone
via
Nursing Clio
on
September 3, 2020
Managing Our Darkest Hatreds And Fears: Witchcraft From The Middle Ages To Brett Kavanaugh
America has a history of dealing with witches - and it has culminated in a modern movement of politically active ones.
by
Diane Purkiss
via
Athenaeum Review
on
October 14, 2019
Who is Dead?
What constitutes death is based on more factors than those that are medical.
by
Sarah Swedberg
via
Nursing Clio
on
September 26, 2018
Martin Luther King Jr. and Milwaukee: 200 Nights and a Tragedy
King's visits to Milwaukee highlighted the extent to which the civil rights struggle was a national one.
by
Mark Speltz
via
Black Perspectives
on
April 2, 2018
Thankstaking
Was the 'first Thanksgiving' merely a pretext for the bloodshed, enslavement, and displacement that would follow in later decades?
by
Jane Kamensky
via
Commonplace
on
January 1, 2001
Making the Memorial
Maya Lin recounts the experience of creating the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
by
Maya Lin
via
New York Review of Books
on
November 2, 2000
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