In June 1942, Kenji and just over one hundred other children were taken from their parents and relocated to Manzanar.

Writer Murray Browne looks back at Pynchon’s novel, once heralded by critics as “bonecrushingly dense,” in light of the age of Qanon.

Your grandfather brought back a copy of Mein Kampf from the frontlines in WWII. No museum wants it. What do you do with it?

In the last several years, questions surrounding monuments that aim to memorialize Confederate-era actors and events have achieved […]

On August 23rd, 1939, as war between France and Germany loomed, a French soldier named Daniel Barlone confided […]

Erwin Rommel comes as close to being a household name in America as a Nazi general can get. […]

We recognize that Memorial Day is primarily a holiday to commemorate those who have died fighting to defend […]

During the mid-1990s, while working evenings and weekends on her PhD dissertation on 18th-century Philadelphia, veteran Library of […]