White Southerners Said “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” Was Fake News
So its author published a “key” to what’s true in the novel
The World’s First Solar-Powered Satellite is Still Up There After More Than 60 Years
This tiny grapefruit-sized satellite will still be up there well into the 2100s if we don’t take it down
Washington’s Army Celebrated St. Patrick’s Day to Cure Winter Blues
Washington declared the day a holiday in an attempt to raise morale and acknowledge the army's many soldiers of Irish descent
The Idea of Surgeons Washing Their Hands is Only 154 Years Old
The world of surgery before that was much grosser and less effective
The First Description of Allergies Was Published On This Day in 1844
John Bostock was a British doctor suffering from what he called “summer catarrh”
This Patent Was the Hallmark of an Aerosol Whip Cream Empire
Aaron “Bunny” Lapin had already made Reddi-Wip a national concern when he finally received the patent for the aerosolizing whip cream nozzle
The First-Ever Blood Bank Opened 80 Years Ago Today
Its inventor also coined the term "blood bank"
The Man Who Dug JFK’s Grave, Twice
Clifton Pollard dug graves in the Arlington National Cemetery for more than thirty years
Getting Married on Pi Day is a Thing
Unfortunately, there are indications that couples who get married on special dates might not have the same chance of succeeding
The Teenager Who Patented Earmuffs Kept His Town Employed for 60 Years
Chester Greenwood became an earmuff tycoon whose factory kept his hometown in business
The Bizarre Beliefs of Astronomer Percival Lowell
Lowell's theories were treated with skepticism even in his own lifetime
Don't Judge the Book-of-the-Month Club By Its Cover
Although today you might associate its name with staid offerings, the club’s first book was by an openly queer author
During (and After) WWII, Some States Had Year-Round Daylight Saving Time
A 1963 'Time Magazine' article called it "a chaos of time"
Two States Have Gone to Court to Keep the KKK From Adopting a Highway
In 2016, Georgia's Department of Transportation actually put the program on hold so it wouldn't have to respond to the hate group's application
The Horrible Fate of John Casor, The First Black Man to be Declared Slave for Life in America
Black people in early America weren't slaves. After this lawsuit, they could be
The American Garment Workers Who Helped Inspire International Women’s Day
Jobs in the garment industry were some of the first to empower women in the industrial workforce
The Letters of Abigail and John Adams Show Their Mutual Respect
We still have 1,160 of their letters, written across the years of their marriage
Here Are All The Discoveries That Had To Happen Before Two Scientists Could Find DNA’s Structure
Watson and Crick weren’t the only ones working on the problems of humanity's genes, by a long shot
The First Breakfast Cereal, Granula, Had to Be Soaked Before Being Eaten
Invented by a doctor and health reformer, the brittle cakes were not an instant success
President James Buchanan Directly Influenced the Outcome of the Dred Scott Decision
He's remembered as a president who tried to unify a fractured nation with little success, doing damage along the way
Page 21 of 28