On the evening of September 17, 1862, in the aftermath of the Battle of Antietam, Private Franklin Thompson of the Second Michigan Infantry Regiment walked among the wounded, the dying and the dead.
Edition host Daniel Hurt speaks with Dr. Don H. Doyle, Civil War historian and professor emeritus of history at the ...
Civil War's United States has been splintered into multiple warring factions, but a shared enemy has united most of them ...
There is widespread concern that the November election will not end well and that American democracy has frayed to the ...
I have no idea who is going to win the 2024 presidential election other than it will be either the open fascist Donald ...
Hezbollah did not immediately confirm the death of Ibrahim Aqeel. The United States had accused him of being involved in ...
In their own lives, Americans tell us that their family, their faith and their friends give them hope. For the country, after ...
With their former countrymen divided and lacking a monarch after the English Civil War, Colonists seized an opportunity to ...
While the 58-foot-long bronze sculpture in Washington D.C. will now be the country's foremost World War I memorial, it is far ...
John Brough founded The Cincinnati Enquirer in 1841. But his victory in the strange Ohio governor’s race during the Civil War ...
Surprising facts about the Electoral College's origins and evolution—and just who is an elector—to ponder alongside giving a watch to One Person, One Vote? on PBS.
Sylvester Stallone’s second season of “Tulsa King” and Snow Patrol's first new album in seven years are some of this week’s ...