April History News: Anzac Day. . . All about Zinn. . . Kennedy Censored Talk Radio

Anzac Day: Australia and New Zealand remember the Gallipoli tragedy of 1915. Howie Tanzman explains.

President Kennedy censored right-wing radio. In the Cato Policy Report.

Melted ice patch in Norway reveals artifacts from travels in Roman times and  the Middle Ages. In the Smithsonian. 

VE-Day in Europe, not so joyous: ‘Some extraordinary vigil over a corpse.’ BBC’s History Extra explains.

Countering Howard Zinn’s ‘tendentious, simplistic, and relentlessly negative view of the American past.’ Wilfred McClay reviews Mary Grabar’s critique.

Saving the chimney sweeps: Anton Howes tells us about an Industrial Revolution innovator who has not received his due.

Why did plague doctors wear masks with beaks? The BBC’s History Extra  explains.

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December News about History and Historians

Politico asks historians for one-paragraph summaries of the significance of the 2010s. Hint: a diversity of opinion.

Phil Magness (AIER) analyzes the debate between the New York Times and historians over the 1619 project, with complex results.

Historians vs. the New York Times re: the 1619 Project. In the New York Times..

Second thoughts about historians’ political petitions. By Andrew Ferguson in the Atlantic.

Was Martin Luther a source of the Western turn toward liberalism? James R. Rogers contemplates the question on Law & Liberty.

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