Throughout history, the reading of books has been a sort of armchair way measuring someone's intelligence. Here are stories of three former presidents at opposite ends of the reading spectrum. You can decide for yourself.
Apr 02, 2018•4 min
One day a year, the White House grounds are truly turned over to the people - well, the kids. That day is the annual White House Easter Egg Roll, and it began as the solution to a problem that Victorian children created.
Mar 30, 2018•4 min
One of baseball's most enduring mysteries surrounds a 17-year-old girl name Jackie Mitchell.
Mar 29, 2018•3 min
Ivanka Trump might be the only first daughter in American history to score a West Wing office, but she’s not the first presidential daughter to wield power in the White House.
Mar 28, 2018•4 min
At the beginning of the television age, “Meet the Press” dented the dominance of newspapers and thrilled news junkies with the you-were-there power of live broadcasting.
Mar 27, 2018•3 min
Andrew Higgins wasn't in the Army. He wasn't a paratrooper. He was a wild and wily genius, a tough, crafty, businessman. And he built the built the boats that brought troops ashore at Normandy on June 6, 1944.
Mar 26, 2018•4 min
The movement organized by survivors of the school shooting in Parkland, Fla., is not the first time that kids have taken a stand. History shows that kids, with their innocence, honesty and moral urgency, can shame adults into discovering their conscience.
Mar 23, 2018•4 min
If the order for a nuclear attack is issued, the soldiers operating the launch machine have no choice but to fire. Or do they?
Mar 22, 2018•4 min
Jesse James, the most famous outlaw in history, was eventually foiled by a picture hanging crooked on a wall.
Mar 21, 2018•4 min
Lawns have always been more than just grass.
Mar 20, 2018•5 min
Dr. Spock - not the guy from Star Trek - was at one time America's most beloved pediatrician. A whole generation of children was raised on his medical advice. But not even his popularity could save him from being indicted by the federal government.
Mar 19, 2018•4 min
Martin Niemoller's simple and haunting words are often quoted in moments of intolerance. The story behind them is much more complicated.
Mar 16, 2018•5 min
Some 50 million people are projected to fill out a March Madness bracket this year. As you finish filling out yours, you might want to tip your pencil and say thanks to the late and loud Staten Island bar owner Jody Haggerty.
Mar 15, 2018•4 min
President Trump made history Tuesday when he nominated a woman to become director of the Central Intelligence Agency. But while a woman leading the CIA was once unthinkable, female spies have made enormous, overlooked contributions in espionage.
Mar 14, 2018•4 min
During World War I, the Marines Corps back home needed help while the men were fighting overseas. Opha May Johnson was the first in line.
Mar 13, 2018•3 min
Cats have endured some really mean stuff throughout history. Dogs should be thankful.
Mar 12, 2018•3 min
Why, oh, why is daylight savings a thing? It's because for roughly two decades after World War II, no one had any clue what time it was.
Mar 09, 2018•3 min
In 1978, Marilyn Loden coined a phrase that paints very image that women have been fighting for decades.
Mar 08, 2018•3 min
A dog and a cadaver deserve credit for their contributions to the invention of the telephone.
Mar 07, 2018•4 min
The deadliest wildfire in U.S. history wasn’t in California.
Mar 06, 2018•4 min
Oscars night is probably the one moment around the world when people become really interested in envelopes.
Mar 05, 2018•5 min
There’s one thing that you can’t have delivered anymore that was totally normal to send by mail in the early 1900s.
Mar 02, 2018•3 min
Edythe Eyde, also known by her pen name Lisa Ben, was a visionary who fought to make lesbians visible in pop culture decades before most others had the guts to do the same.
Mar 01, 2018•4 min
Buildings that stand as symbols of American democracy - the White House, Mount Vernon and Monticello, to name a few - were erected with the labor of those who were not free.
Feb 28, 2018•3 min
When the NRA was founded in 1871, its primary concern was not gun rights or the Second Amendment.
Feb 27, 2018•4 min
If you’re like most Americans, you probably visit a grocery store once or twice a week. But you probably don’t know that one single grocery item is responsible for the rise of supermarkets as we know them.
Feb 26, 2018•3 min
In the 1930s, traveling the nation's highways while black was fraught with peril. One postal worker, Victor Green, wrote a guidebook for African Americans after he faced discrimination on a road trip.
Feb 23, 2018•4 min
Sonja Henie won three Olympic gold medals and 10 world championships, and turned her star power into as career as one of Hollywood's biggest movie stars. Meet figure skating's first megastar.
Feb 22, 2018•5 min
Katherine Graham's leadership in the decision to release the Pentagon Papers was the subject of the Stephen Spielberg film "The Post." But it was her leadership during the pressman's strike in 1975 that is perhaps the most gripping moment of her life.
Feb 21, 2018•5 min
To understand the gruesome history of the death penalty, it is essential to comprehend how badly Thomas Edison wanted to zap George Westinghouse.
Feb 20, 2018•4 min