Remembering the Texas City Explosion
Seventy years after the deadliest industrial disaster in American history, a Houston filmmaker unites the survivors.
Seventy years after the deadliest industrial disaster in American history, a Houston filmmaker unites the survivors.
The honky-tonk celebrates its seventy-fifth anniversary with two Texas country icons.
Memories of the future at a long-gone Dallas hamburger joint.
The truth hurts, as historians discovered when they broke the news that Crockett surrendered.
To honor the lifework of his ”musical father,” Texas country star Randy Rogers purchases the historic honky-tonk that launched his career.
A seizure of sombreros in San Antonio.
Can one very determined man get a booming Houston suburb to confront its troubled past?
Well, sort of.
The organizers of the White Lives Matter protest say they aren’t targeting the monument, but it’s hard to overlook the coincidence.
A sighting of the image on UNT's Portal to Texas History website prompted the discovery.
It's been decades since San Marcos's famed Aquamaids performed, but San Marcos is reviving the mermaid as a symbol of cultural identity and environmental protection.
A reminder that Charles Whitman’s shooting spree resonated far outside of Texas.
If you’ve got a quarter million dollars, get on it.
When U.S. history is already whitewashed, a book about Mexican-Americans that relies on stereotypes only does more harm.
Longview lawyer Howard Coghlan, who identified himself in the photograph, passed away at 89.
A big bag o' cats in Austin.
Miracle Mattress's 9/11 ad didn't go over well, to say the very least.
Turkish leaders are blaming Fethullah Gulen, a man with deep ties to Texas’s largest charter school system, for the attempted takeover.
A restauranteur's death in 1949 was also the end of the short-lived Houston Mafia.
Why is the federal government claiming thousands of acres of riverfront property from a bunch of North Texas landowners?
The great trail drives head for the last roundup.
I never knew my father, a decorated World War II pilot who died before I was born. But a trek at age 67 to the site where his airplane crashed brought me closer to him than I’d ever dared hope.
In a world full of evil dudes pretending to be good guys, Waylon Jennings was a good guy pretending to be an evil dude and never quite succeeding.
Brann becomes a casualty in his own war with the Baptists. Texas Collection of Baylor University“In the year of our Lord, 1891, I became pregnant with an idea. Being at the time chief editorial writer on the Houston Post, I felt dreadfully mortified, as nothing
The aftermath of the recent rape scandal at Baylor is shocking, but the fallout isn't a first for the Waco school.
Outside San Saba stands the last Texas suspension span still open to traffic.
Two tales of fathers and sons.
The state capitol's adventures in portraiture.
Veggie tales from Brownsville in the early twentieth century.
All the Way playwright Robert Schenkkan on Donald Trump, George Wallace, and why Bryan Cranston makes a great LBJ.
How one woman’s fight for freedom inspired Houston’s lawyers and artists more than a century and a half later.
What kolaches, African-American cooking, and chili queens can teach us about women’s influence on Texas cuisine.
How guns are central to our—and my—identity.
Making the guns that won the West.
Guns have always been part of my life, and I’ve never forgotten the lesson I learned the first time I fired one.
On nineteenth-century Texas’s primitive roads, riding on a stage line was hardly a glamorous affair.
The aerial pursuits of the Greenville Banner.
A hipster paradise, a high-tech nirvana, a festival wonderland. Today Austin barely resembles the sleepy college town I moved to in the seventies. How it changed is the story of a lifetime.
If you don’t know it, can’t remember it, or won’t sing it, what good is it?
Acknowledging the past is just the first step for this small town.
An exclusive excerpt from the forthcoming book by Jenni Finlay and Brian T. Atkinson.
The whisky fad.
Texas Monthly gets an exclusive look inside the iconic Main House of the King Ranch.
In a small shop in El Paso, a man practices a craft that may soon be no more.
The descendants of Richard and Henrietta King do hereby invite you into the King Ranch with these exclusive photographs of the one-hundred-year-old Main House.
Because a dance is the best way to learn about this dark time in U.S. history.
After years of trying to find out about the subject of this photo, clues emerge in an unlikely place.
Though Quanah Parker and the way of life he represented is long gone, his headdress remains.
Three academics plumb the rags-to-rags stories that have long been excluded from our state mythology.
The famed musicologist’s obsession with history made him one of the great chroniclers of American music.