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Jordan Friedman ‑ Stories

Jordan Friedman is a writer and editor based in New York City. His work has appeared in publications including Fortune Magazine, USA TODAY, U.S. News & World Report and Mental Floss. You can find his work at jordanmatthewfriedman.com.

Directional sign to destinations in Death Valley, California.

How Are Places Named in the US?

Place names are rooted in Indigenous languages, physical characteristics and honorifics for politicians and pioneers—and they can be controversial.

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On This Day in History: U.S. Surgeon General announces definitive link between smoking and cancer

When Cigarette Warning Labels Led to a Crackdown on Smoking

The 1965 U.S. law requiring health warnings on cigarette packs played a key role in bringing about a new era of tobacco regulation.

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Alaska's Denali towers above the landscape at 20,310’ tall.

Why the Name of Alaska’s Peak Changed From Mt. McKinley to Denali

A gold prospector dubbed the peak Mount McKinley in 1896, but Alaskans have historically championed Denali, a name rooted in its Native American history.

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Applying a plaster cast to a patient's lower leg and foot, February 1948.

How Health Insurance Got Its Start in America

A 1929 prepaid hospital plan created in Dallas gave rise to early health insurance companies—and helped spur the growth of a major industry.

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The Gateway Arch monument against the St.Louis skyline at sunset

7 Surprising Facts About the St. Louis Gateway Arch

Standing 630 feet tall with foundations sinking 60 feet into the ground, the St. Louis Gateway Arch is the tallest—and arguably one of the most visually daring—monuments in the United States. The soaring stainless steel arch, designed to withstand earthquakes and high winds, rises from the earth and then curves back into the ground, a […]

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New Years Eve celebration at Times Square.

How Timekeeping Innovations Turned New Year’s Into a Midnight Celebration

The completion of the transcontinental railroad drove synchronization of public clocks—and the start of celebrating at the stroke of midnight.

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A public school room in Washington, D.C. circa late 1800s.

The Rise and Rapid Fall of the First US Department of Education

The department, established in 1867, faced opposition from some Southern congressmen who associated it with education for the formerly enslaved.

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CBS's Presper Eckert and Walter Cronkite, Election Night, 1952.

The Year Election Night First Became a TV Event

In 1952, news stations combined two new technologies—the TV and the computer—to forever transform how voters experience election night.

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