In the autumn of 1777, as the air grew colder and the Revolutionary War lumbered into yet another year of uncertainty, the Continental Congress found itself facing a problem that could no longer be postponed: the United States of America existed only as an idea—an inspiring one, a defiant one, but still a fragile and …
2025-11-15 archive
When New York First Met O’Keeffe: The Exhibition That Changed American Art
When Georgia O’Keeffe’s first art exhibition opened in New York in the spring of 1916, the city vibrated with modern ambition. The streets hummed with the electric excitement of a rapidly changing America—skyscrapers rising like steel prayers into the heavens, taxis weaving through the shadows of elevated train lines, the lingering scent of coal smoke …
Teaching Peace to a Broken World: The Birth of UNESCO and the Hope It Carried
In November 1945, as the embers of the Second World War still smoldered and much of the world struggled to comprehend the scale of devastation it had witnessed, a group of nations gathered in London to build something radically different from anything attempted before. The war had ended only months earlier, leaving behind a tangle …