Fannie Farmer Was the Original Rachael Ray
Farmer was the first prominent figure to advocate scientific cookery. Her cookbook remains in print to this day
The Six-Day Hostage Standoff That Gave Rise to ‘Stockholm Syndrome’
Although it is widely known, 'Stockholm syndrome' is not recognized by the APA
The True Story of the Short-Lived State of Franklin
Several counties in what is today Tennessee tried to form their own independent state
The Mysterious Motives Behind the Theft of ‘The Scream’
Two versions of ‘The Scream’ have been stolen and recovered in Norway
How America’s First Adding Machine is Connected to ‘Naked Lunch’
William Seward Burroughs (no, not that one) was the first man to invent a commercially practical calculator
One of the World’s Most Famous Hospitals Was Originally a Makeshift Tornado Relief Clinic
You could say the first Mayo Clinic was a dance hall that had been converted into a makeshift field hospital
England’s Witch Trials Were Lawful
It might seem like collective madness today, but the mechanisms for trying witches in England were enshrined in law
The Science of Soft Serve
It's just like regular ice cream–with a few big differences
Chemist Hazel Bishop's Lipstick Wars
Bishop said her advantage in coming up with cosmetics was that, unlike male chemists, she actually used them
The Romance of Fermat's Last Theorem
Fermat left a lot of theorems lying around. Mathematicians proved them all–except one
Napoleon's Lifelong Interest in Science
Napoleon was a Frenchman of his time, which means he was interested in how science could do good–he just took it farther than most
If You Think ‘Bambi’ Seems Too Mature For Kids, You’re Not Wrong
The popular novel was even a Book-of-the-Month Club selection
Florence Harding, Not Eleanor Roosevelt, May Have Created the Modern First Lady
She did things her own way, and helped to set a precedent for the First Ladies who followed her
The Big Unsexy Problem With Tiger Selfies
Why drugging and caging the cats for Tinder photos is even more messed up than it sounds
Months Before Pearl Harbor, Churchill and Roosevelt Held a Secret Meeting of Alliance
The two leaders met in a warship off the coast of northern Canada to talk strategy
‘Casey at the Bat’ Leaves a Lot of Unanswered Questions
Was there a Casey? Where did he strike out? Does it really matter?
A Brief History of Trans-Atlantic Balloon Crossings
Fifteenth time’s the charm, evidently
Alcatraz Wasn't Always 'Uncle Sam's Devil's Island'
Though it was a prison for more than a century, it didn't become the famous maximum-security penitentiary until 1934
The Bizarre Story of 'Vasa,' the Ship That Keeps On Giving
'Vasa' sunk in front of horrified onlookers on this day in 1628, claiming 30 lives
Three Things to Know About the Louvre's History
The home of the Mona Lisa has a history that's almost 1000 years long
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