Miss May Hibbert displays two of her musquash or muskrats at Mears Ghyll Fur Farm in Caton, England

The Rise and Fall of Britain’s Muskrat Empire

A fur-farming experiment unleashed a prolific rodent—and sparked one of the rare successful eradications of an invasive species.
A photograph of an atomic bomb umbrella detonation as part of Operation Hardtack in the Enewetak/Bikini/Johnnston Island Area.

The Nuclear Test Site That Advanced Oceanography

A postwar expedition to Bikini Atoll helped confirm Darwin’s theory of coral reef formation and reshaped the future of marine science.
Conolly's Folly, built in 1740 by laborers hired during an earlier Irish famine, anticipated the make-work projects of the Great Famine a century later.

The Ghost Roads of Ireland’s Great Famine

Starving families were forced to earn aid by carving roads through rock, fields, and mountainsides.
Abstract geometric blue and red polka dot background covering a series of Atlas images from a 1776 atlas

The Atlas Behind the Revolution

While George Washington struggled to obtain reliable maps, British readers could consult this remarkable 1776 atlas.
President Reagan reading "Air Force One is Haunted" aboard Air Force One, 1986.

When Did Presidents Start Traveling Abroad?

For more than a century, foreign trips have reflected America's changing role in the world—and presidents' political priorities.
Child laborers at the entrance of a Sicilian sulfur mine

How Sicilian Sulfur Fueled the Industrial Revolution

Britain’s textile boom depended on a resource extracted under brutal conditions far from its factories.
Pamphlet from boycotters from the Local 366 Union

“Brewed with Blood”: The Coors Beercott of the 1970s

An unusual coalition transformed a labor dispute into one of the longest-running consumer protests in US history.
From left to right: Audre Lorde, Chen Chen, Richard Siken, Adrienne Rich, Eileen Myles, and Ocean Vuong.

10 Modern and Contemporary Poems by Queer Writers

Love poems, political declarations, lyrical confessions, and formal experiments by Adrienne Rich, Audre Lorde, Ocean Vuong, Eileen Myles, and more.
A collage featuring the cover of the Battle of Dorking

The Evolution of Britain’s Invasion Fiction

How fears of foreign plots and national decline moved from nineteenth-century novels into today's thrillers.
A sale of enslaved people in Charleston, South Carolina, 1854

How the Slave Trade Built Charleston

The city's prosperity grew from a system that trafficked human beings and turned their lives into profit.