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Last Updated 12:00 AM EST November 07, 2009


Bernie Weisberger

IN HIS MARVELOUS MEMOIR, Flights of Passage, my friend and onetime colleague Samuel Hynes, a Marine Corps combat aviator in World War II, writes that the war is the shared secret of his generation—those young men who came of age between December 7, 1941, and September 2, 1945. For those of the approximately 12 million Americans in uniform for some or all of those years, it was an experience both personal and collective like nothing before or after. Those who went through the hell of combat carry physical and emotional scars as reminders. But those of us—actually the great majority—who served in the infinite variety of supporting roles also stored up memories that will only die with us.

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In celebration of the 400th anniversary of Samuel de Champlain’s and Henry Hudson’s exploration of New York—and their encounters with Lenape and Iroquoian peoples—the editors of American Heritage have selected the top historic sites along the watercourses they gave their names to.

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On the Web: Editors’ Picks

Letter shows Revere’s sharp business sense

'Mighty Mo' undergoing $18M preservation

U.S. Navy to Honor Civil Rights Figure Medgar Evers

Washington: First in War, Peace -- and Accounting

October: A Month to Remember George C. Marshall

Merrill D. Peterson, Jefferson Scholar, Dies at 88

Helen Keller statue unveiled at Capitol


Blog
 
 How to Eat a Book
Posted by John F. Ross at 05:00 PM  EST
May 21, 2009

American Heritage's Editorial Assistant Madeline Kelty (seated in the picture) displayed unheralded skills when she baked...


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Why History?
Posted by John F. Ross at 12:00 AM  EST
April 22, 2009

This is the first entry by American Heritage Executive Editor and author John F. Ross in a new blog about the trials,...


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Baer designed an analog gaming control, above, which used two potentiometers to measure positions along the X and Y axes.The Father of Video Games

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Dozens of individuals, including Chicago Tribune journalist Clarence Page, above (right), brought family photographs to Maryland’s SilverDocs film festival to be scanned for the Digital Diaspora Family Reunion, a user-generated, web-based, and interactive archive of African-American photography, which producer Thomas Allen Harris, above (left), believes will bring hidden and forgotten history to light.Digital History Review: Get Out Your Photographs!

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Bataan.Surviving Bataan

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Rogers Rangers.Wilderness Ordeal

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Picture of the Day
The Loop the Loop at Coney Island, around 1903.
The Loop the Loop at Coney Island, around 1903.
 
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Today in History
November 7

2000: Hillary Rodham Clinton is elected to the Senate, becoming the first First Lady to win public office.

1929: The Museum of Modern Art opens in New York City.

1874: The first important use of an elephant as a symbol for the Republicans appears in Harper's Weekly.

1811: The Battle of Tippecanoe is fought between the Shawnee Indians and Maj. Gen. William Henry Harrison and his forces.

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Poll
July 20, 2009 marks the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission, during which Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first men to walk on the Moon. The last lunar manned mission was 35 years ago. Should the U.S. continue to fund manned space missions?
The U.S. should build a manned space station on the Moon.
It was a waste of money then, and it will be now.
Let’s get out of this paralyzing economic crunch first.
Space – The Final Frontier!


Discuss this poll

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Quote of the Day
October 31

“I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things.”

Antoine de Saint-Exupery, French pilot and author


     
 
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Invention & TechnologyAmerican LegacyForbes Magazine
 
 Invention & Technology 

Invention & Technology

The only magazine placing the amazing history of American inventiveness in your hands.

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