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Holocaust Museum Digitizing Letters From Anne Frank's Father
A Cape Cod man has donated a trove of letters and mementos he received from Frank to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington. -
Memorial Remembers Enslaved People Buried In Unmarked Graves In Medford
Dozens of enslaved people were buried in unmarked graves in Medford’s Salem Street Burying Ground, some of them more than two and a half centuries ago. -
'Take Me Out To The Ball Game' Could Have Been A Feminist Anthem
The famous ballpark song was written as a woman's cry to attend games. -
World War II Paratrooper On Commemorating D-Day: 'Show Some Citizenship'
Leslie Cruise served as a paratrooper during the D-Day invasion, June 6, 1945. The 95-year-old veteran reflects on his survival often and believes he has an obligation to share his story. -
Natick Museum Commemorates 75th Anniversary Of D-Day
On Friday, hundreds of items will be on special display in an exhibit that commemorates the 75th anniversary of the Normandy landings at the International Museum of World War II. -
Trump Reads From FDR's Prayer To The US On D-Day
President Donald Trump read from a prayer delivered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt as he joined other world leaders and veterans Wednesday in marking the 75th anniversary of D-Day. -
Student Protest Leaders Remember Tiananmen, 30 Years Later
There has never been an official body count, and the subject is taboo. A generation of Chinese has grown into adulthood shielded from the truth. -
Harriet Tubman On The $20 Bill? Not During The Trump Administration
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin ruled out any changes to the U.S. currency imagery before 2028. -
Virginia Town Remembers The High Price Paid On D-Day
Twenty men from Bedford, Va., or the surrounding area were killed on D-Day, June 6, 1944. -
How Making History Unmade A Family
The Goodridges were the face of legalizing same-sex marriage. But, less than five years later, they were getting divorced.