1. George Washington: The Architect of Executive Power Washington walked on untrodden ground, shaping the presidency with no ...
Franklin Roosevelt’s likeness has appeared on the U.S. dime since 1946. Roosevelt is featured on the dime to commemorate his ...
What does it profit a president if he gains the critical minerals of Greenland but loses America’s global footing?
Packed with frescoes, paintings and reliefs, the federal government's Cohen Building has been called "the Sistine Chapel of ...
Do not retaliate.” (Europe did not say that it would listen.) But Trump’s audacious power play won’t stop there: While in ...
And then there’s Andrew Jackson, the two-term president from Tennessee known as “Old Hickory.” Like Trump, the seventh president was keen on expanding the power of the office and aggressively battled ...
As the strike continues, political leaders have weighed in calling on both sides to return to the bargaining table and reach ...
What Reconstruction, the New Deal and the Rainbow Coalition can teach us about building the broadest possible front to fight ...
Appalachia's experiments with model communities show the need for local ownership of land and the freedom for residents to ...
From free speech fights to picket lines to defending political prisoners, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn lived a life on the front ...
Discover the major policies of the 1960s' Great Society, their impact on civil rights, education, healthcare, and how they ...
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” address at 1963’s March on Washington is perhaps the most famous speech in American history. But fewer people remember the man behind King’s dream ...