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  • Walt Whitman

    Aired April 14, 2008

    He is today one of the most-recognized figures in American literary history: poet, patriot and faithful advocate of democracy.

  • Minik

    Aired March 31, 2008

    In 1897, renowned Arctic explorer Robert Peary returned to New York from his latest Greenland expedition. At the request of anthropologist Franz Boas, he brought with him five polar Inuits for study at the American Museum of Natural History. Within months, four of them had fallen sick and died, leaving a seven-year-old boy named Minik to fend for himself in a foreign land. 

  • Buffalo Bill

    Aired February 25, 2008

    William "Buffalo Bill" Cody's legendary exploits helped create the myth of the American West that still endures today.

  • Kit Carson

    Aired February 18, 2008

    The ultimate frontiersman, Carson inspired popular novels before being associated with the "Long Walk" of the Navajo people.

  • Grand Central

    Aired February 4, 2008

    A marvel of engineering, architecture, and vision, the story of the Beaux Arts structure on 42nd Street that forever changed midtown Manhattan.

  • The Lobotomist

    Aired January 21, 2008

    In the 1940s Dr. Walter Freeman gained fame for perfecting the lobotomy, then hailed as a miracle cure for the severely mentally ill. But within a few years, lobotomy was labeled one of the most barbaric mistakes of modern medicine.

  • Oswald's Ghost

    Aired January 14, 2008

    The assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas on November 22, 1963 left a psychic wound on America that is with us still today.

  • Alexander Hamilton

    Aired May 14, 2007

    The underappreciated genius who laid the groundwork for the nation's modern economy — including the banking system, Wall Street, and an "opportunity society" in which talent and hard work, not birth, determined success.

  • The Mormons

    Aired April 30, 2007

    A four-hour exploration into the richness, the complexities and the controversies of the Mormons' story as told through interviews with members of the church, leading writers and historians, and supporters and critics of the Mormon faith.

  • Summer of Love

    Aired June 12, 2018 | 60 min

    A fleeting moment in the turbulent history of the 1960s, the Summer of Love's underlying message left an indelible impression on those who witnessed it.

  • Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple

    Aired April 9, 2007

    In 1978 over 900 people led by Rev. Jim Jones died in the largest mass murder-suicide in history, at Jonestown, Guyana. The story is told by survivors, Temple defectors, relatives, and journalists.

  • Sister Aimee

    Aired April 2, 2007

    Sister Aimee tells the dramatic life story Aimee Semple McPherson, the controversial, charismatic, wildly popular evangelist who was instrumental in bringing conservative Protestantism into mainstream culture and American politics.