June 1956

Departments
READING, WRITING AND HISTORY
Features
John Charles Frémont never succeeded in living up to his fame, yet he was one of America’s great explorers
The political convention was devised to meet an unforeseen need, and now and then it has an unexpected result
Roger Williams liked Indians and almost everyone else, and he founded a colony that gave our freedom a broader horizon
Washington would be a capital of Egyptian pillars and Roman splendor if this hardware merchant’s grandiose plan had been adopted
Stickler for a point of honor, the General marched to defeat and helped to lose a war
Her past was shady but her conscience was excellent, and all in all she played a big part in the emancipation of women
For decades the private railroad car was the great symbol of wealth. Here is what it looked like in its heyday.
Along the Mississippi the spirit of vanished culture lingers in the ruined columns of the great plantations
Modern G. I.’s will recognize a fellow spirit in the sergeant who wrote this account of life in General Washington’s army
The third in a series on TIMES OF TRIAL IN AMERICAN STATECRAFT
Old Hickory's attack on Biddle's bank had some unexpected consequences
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