National News

Scroll through these photos of the total solar eclipse, from coast-to-coast

The continental United States experienced a total solar eclipse for the first time in 38 years on Monday.

The eclipse shows through a layer of clouds over the Ravenel Bridge in Charleston, South Carolina.

First-grade students at Oyster-Adams Bilingual School in Washington, D.C., watch the eclipse.

People watch the start of the eclipse and raise their hands in prayer at a viewing event at Big Summit Prairie ranch in Oregon’s Ochoco National Forest.

The eclipse goes to totality near Fairview, Kansas.

From left, Ivanka Trump, first lady Melania Trump, President Donald Trump, and Barron Trump view the eclipse from the White House.

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Sean Patrick, a third-grade teacher, observes the sun before the total solar eclipse at the Bald Knob Cross of Peace in Alto Pass, Illinois.

A handout photo made available by NASA shows a composite image of the progression of a partial solar eclipse over Ross Lake in Northern Cascades National Park, Washington.

Veronica, Genevieve, and Caroline Whitney look at the eclipse in Wilmington, North Carolina.

A telescope projects an image of the eclipse during a viewing event in Irvine, California.

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A partial solar eclipse appears over the Statue of Liberty on Liberty Island in New York.

A woman reacts to seeing the eclipse along the waterfront near the Boston Children’s Museum.

Players from Mexico put on eclipse glasses for a TV spot, just before a Little League World Series game in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania.

Bonnie Tyler sang “Total Eclipse of the Heart” on a Royal Caribbean cruise.

In this multiple exposure photograph, the phases of a partial solar eclipse are seen over the Gateway Arch in St. Louis.

Shadows from a near total solar eclipse are projected on a sidewalk in midtown Atlanta.

Louis Serrano came to Charleston, South Carolina, from Florida to view the eclipse.

Griffin O’Roak watches the rising sun through his homemade eclipse viewer at a gathering in Salem, Oregon.

People gathered on the breakwater around Old Scituate Light to photograph and look at the eclipse.

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The eclipse through a pair of protective glasses in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.

Kindergarten teacher Nancy Morgan reads books about the sun and moon to her students in Savannah, Georgia.

Val Carney, 43, of Asheville, North Carolina, builds her sand tribute to the eclipse in Isle of Palms, South Carolina.

The eclipse on Colonial Lake in Charleston, South Carolina.

Taylor Sullivan, 6, watches the sun at an eclipse viewing event in Tampa.