Every horse in the race is descended from Lexington, a 19th century record-breaking bay stallion. How did one horse become such a giant in the field, a subject of best-sellers, and enduring lessons in collaboration between Black and white Americans?
A horse for the ages: In the popular illustration above, Lexington is shown racing. Pictured at top, Harry Lewis, in top hat and coat, lovingly trained Lexington while enslaved on a Kentucky plantation. Lewis, who won his freedom in 1850, is shown with a later champion horse, Richard Singleton, in this painting. Read more.
KING ME! CORONATION EDITION
PHOTOGRAPH BY DANIEL LEAL, AFP/GETTY
Behind the scenes: Among the objects you did not see at today’s coronation: The Coronation Bed (pictured above) was built in 1859, and is slightly bigger than a standard king size you’ll find today. It disappeared in the 1940s, was bought in an auction a few years later, and is now restfully back to Parliament. Read about more coronation objects here.
Do you know? Made in the late 1800s, a father-son team created these models to be used in classrooms. Do you know what the above is, and what it’s made from?
An undersea secret: “The small glowing light on the distant horizon is … fiery lava explosions,” writes Nat Geo Explorer Laurent Ballesta. “Though this flickering glow is barely perceptible from afar, it has persisted for thousands of years—and we’re headed straight for it.” (Pictured above, the “Valley of 200 Volcanoes.”)
This newsletter has been curated and edited by David Beard, Hannah Farrow, Mallory Benedict, and Jen Tse. Amanda Williams-Bryant, Alisher Egamov, Rita Spinks, and Jeremy Brandt-Vorel also contributed this week. Thanks for reading!
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