The most iconic buildings and people that 250 years ago delivered the American Revolution are indeed being brought to life 10 miles due south of the I-15 freeway.
The 500-foot-long quilt traveled from Colonial Williamsburg’s Merchants Square to its visitor center, where it is now on display.
In studying history, it is key to avoid definitional anachronism—failing to note how a word has changed over time and ...
Meet Moose the Cleveland Bay horse and Ozzy the Leicester Longwool sheep, exactly the kinds of animals that one would find on ...
In colonial America, even a short journey could turn deadly. Roads were little more than muddy trails, rivers were unpredictable, and disease, bandits, and exposure were constant threats. A trip that ...
The Bishop Hill Heritage Association is honoring the nation’s 250th birthday by hosting a free series of programs that ...
Despite the claims of the chartalists, early American monetary history tells a much different story than one falsely claiming state-issued fiat money ...
WILLIAMSBURG — At just 4 years old, Ethan Rose is already something of a budding history enthusiast. Last year, the preschooler from Washington, D.C., had an archaeology phase, and right now, his ...
Part I. Race and colonization. 1. Indian children in early Mexico / Dorothy Tanck de Estrada -- 2. Colonizing childhood: religion, gender, and Indian children in southern New England, 1600-1720 / R.
An unemployed Prussian drillmaster named Baron von Steuben clutches his (largely fabricated) letters of recommendation as he awaits a job interview in Pennsylvania. Molly Brant, a Haudenosaunee ...