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Grandson of President John Tyler, Who Left Office in 1845, Dies at Age 95
Born 14 years after the nation's founding, the tenth commander-in-chief still has one living grandson.
by
Livia Gershon
via
Smithsonian
on
October 6, 2020
Lincoln’s Forgotten Legacy as America’s First ‘Green President’
Lincoln protected thousands of acres of California forest and wanted to restore the nation’s battle-ravaged countryside before he was assassinated.
by
Hannah Natanson
via
Retropolis
on
February 16, 2020
When American Politicos First Weaponized Conspiracy Theories
Outlandish rumors helped elect Presidents Jackson and Van Buren and have been with us ever since.
by
Mark R. Cheathem
via
What It Means to Be American
on
March 28, 2019
Purchasing Patriotism: Politicization of Shoes, 1760s-1770s
Materials themselves, like shoes reflected and shaped political cultures around the revolutionary Atlantic and World.
by
Kimberly S. Alexander
via
Age of Revolutions
on
March 4, 2019
America’s Struggle for Moral Coherence
The problem of how to reconcile irreconcilable values is what led to the Civil War. It hasn’t gone away.
by
Andrew Delbanco
via
The Atlantic
on
November 12, 2018
Raising Cane
The violence on Capitol Hill that foreshadowed a bloody war.
by
Joanne B. Freeman
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
September 15, 2018
Are the Parties Dying?
A conversation on party politics and the durability of our current political system.
by
Christopher Caldwell
,
Michael Kazin
,
Frances Lee
,
David Karol
via
Democracy Journal
on
March 19, 2018
Today’s Eerie Echoes of the Civil War
We may not be in the midst of a war today, but the progress of democracy in this country is still tied to the rights of its most vulnerable citizens.
by
Manisha Sinha
via
New York Review of Books
on
March 6, 2018
The Bostonian Who Armed the Anti-Slavery Settlers in "Bleeding Kansas"
How Amos Adams Lawrence became an abolitionist.
by
Robert K. Sutton
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
August 8, 2017
Violence Against Members of Congress Has a Long, and Ominous, History
In the 1840s and 1850s, it was all too common.
by
Joanne B. Freeman
via
Washington Post
on
June 15, 2017
Trump's Jacksonian Moment
A new biography of Andrew Jackson recounts a bloody history, and reveals disturbing parallels between the 1830s and the Trump era.
by
Richard White
via
Boston Review
on
June 7, 2017
How the 19th-Century Know Nothing Party Shaped American Politics
From xenophobia to conspiracy theories, the Know Nothing party launched a nativist movement whose effects are still felt today.
by
Lorraine Boissoneault
via
Smithsonian
on
January 26, 2017
How Women Changed American Politics
How feminism and antifeminism created Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.
by
Jill Lepore
via
The New Yorker
on
June 27, 2016
The Truth About Abolition
The movement finally gets the big, bold history it deserves.
by
Adam Rothman
via
The Atlantic
on
April 1, 2016
Antebellum Data Journalism: Or, How Big Data Busted Abe Lincoln
An 1848 investigative news story that relied on heavy data analysis snared big fish, including two future presidents.
by
Scott Klein
via
ProPublica
on
March 17, 2015
Founding Fathers, Founding Villains
A review of a handful of new books that embody the new liberal originalism.
by
William Hogeland
via
Boston Review
on
September 1, 2012
All That Remains of Henry Clay
Political funerals and the tour of Henry Clay's corpse.
by
Sarah J. Purcell
via
Commonplace
on
April 2, 2012
Children Will Listen
A political education begins with knockoff opinions amid the 1840 U.S. presidential election.
by
Andrew Dickson White
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
March 1, 1905
The Election in November
The Atlantic’s editor endorsed Abraham Lincoln for presidency in the 1860 election, correctly predicting it would prove to be “a turning-point in our history.”
by
James Russell Lowell
via
The Atlantic
on
October 1, 1860
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