News

On the steps of the SC Statehouse sits a statue of George Washington, with a broken walking stick. How it broke, however, is ...
Every single generation is convinced, it seems, that their revolution will work, and their moment is uniquely in need of ...
In breaking news this week, former New York Times Book Review editor Sam Tanenhaus finally finished his authorized biography of William F. Buckley Jr. It took him only about 25 years to complete the 1 ...
Total war against civilians didn't begin with World War II. It was official policy of the Union during the Civil War to lay ...
Are you a hoarder? A pack rat? This column should make you feel better. I tend to throw things out, often before I should. I have maybe 10 books and no vinyl records. Why do I need them? I live in ...
In a cistern discovered on the grounds of the Old LSU Site Walking Trail in Pineville, an LSU student picks up a piece of ...
As Trump-led attacks on DEI and non-white history continue across the country, R.T. Thorne and Danielle Deadwyler share their thoughts.
Following a U.S.-brokered ceasefire, experts say Iran’s missile program has suffered major damage — but thousands of ...
Fred Minus brought Civil War history to life at Hopewell Valley Central High School, highlighting the experiences of Black ...
In the grand scheme of things, there has been Michigander who shaped impacted the presidency more than any other. Even more ...
Shultz invoked the famous, albeit notorious, Civil War Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman, who burned Atlanta and continued on a path of destruction straight through to the Atlantic Ocean.