William E. Leuchtenburg, a leading scholar of Franklin Roosevelt and the Great Depression, has died at age 102.
The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 kneecapped America's ability to escape the Great Depression, and today's trade wars look increasingly similar.
John J. Miller is joined by Spencer Klavan to discuss the letters of Epicurus. National Review’s national correspondent and professor at Hillsdale College, John J. Miller, discusses classic ...
The Great Depression was the driving force behind many classic American dishes, including an unappetizingly named burger you ...
Gen Z might put more pressure on itself than older coworkers. A survey conducted by Empower found that Gen Zers define ...
In the 1920s, the U.S. economy boomed, for the rich, and then busted the nation into the Great Depression. Will Trump II and ...
Based on analysis of a historical dataset created during the 1930s that captured the life stories of thousands of older Americans, researchers offer a reminder that work isn’t just about income but ...
Immigrants have been recruited to work in the US, then later the US has deported many depending upon shifts in attitudes, ...
Hiring is anemic in most industries and, with mortgage rates high, people aren’t moving.
Investors and diplomats alike were relieved that he refrained from slapping universal tariffs on all imports on his first day ...
Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist, novelist, playwright, screenwriter, and humorist touched every American popular artform in ...
As the world was plunged into darkness during the Great Depression, Americans had to get crafty with their meals. With … ...