Black History Month is the perfect time to get acquainted with some of the many African American historical sites that dot the South. There is plenty of Black history and culture worth exploring in ...
But that’s just the start of what makes Staunton so special. It’s also a college town — Mary Baldwin University overlooks the ...
United States Human Rights Violations against the Numu/Nuwu and Newe in the Rush for Lithium,” found that the US Bureau of ...
Lizard Mound State Park in West Bend contains some of the most well preserved Native American burial mounds in the state ... they partnered with several Wisconsin tribes, including the Ho-Chunk Nation ...
Two Pittsburgh museums are again offering free admission for kids for a limited time. The Heinz History Center and Fort Pitt Museum will let kids under the age of 17 in for free during Black History ...
Their whereabouts baffled historians for centuries until 2012 when experts with the British Museum analysed the 400-year-old “La Virginea Pars” map drawn by one of the colonists named John White, ...
Google Maps users in the United States will soon see the “Gulf of Mexico” renamed as the “Gulf of America,” following a directive from the Trump administration. This change will be updated on the ...
Google has said it will be updating its maps to change the "Gulf of Mexico ... because it came quickly after a clear signal from an American president, whereas name changes are usually a long ...
Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, recently joked that perhaps North America should instead be called “Mexican America” in a cheeky nod to historical maps. The Trump administration insists these ...
Payment, former first vice president of the National Congress of American Indians ... Payment said the announcement was “catching tribes off guard,” although it’s normal to see a change ...
Google Maps routinely uses different names to refer to the same places, depending on the location of a user ... that has little analogue in American history. Obamacare: The administration ...
The fate of the settlers who founded the "Lost Colony of Roanoke" in what is now North Carolina remains unknown.