Three Medical Breakthroughs That Can Be Traced Back to a Tragic Nightclub Fire
Four hundred ninety-two people died as a result of the horrifying fire, an unprecedented death toll that led physicians to make unprecedented innovations
Our Cloud Names Come From a 1700s Amateur Meteorologist
Luke Howard's nomenclature inspired writers as well as scientists
Friction Matches Were a Boon to Those Lighting Fires–Not So Much to Matchmakers
Those who worked in match factories were exposed to white phosphorus, which caused a debilitating and potentially deadly condition
How WWII Created the Care Package
Technically, the innovation was originally trademarked
The Pilgrims Weren't the First to Celebrate Thanksgiving
Virginia has a claim to an earlier Christian Thanksgiving celebration
Why Do We Call TV Watchers ‘Viewers’?
It all goes back to a quirky BBC subcommittee working in the 1930s to change the English language
The Peculiar Story of the Witch of Wall Street
Walking the streets in black clothes and making obscene amounts of money, Hetty Green was one of the Gilded Age's many characters
Voltaire: Enlightenment Philosopher and Lottery Scammer
The French government was trying to raise money by running a bond lottery, but a group of intellectuals had other ideas
The First Thanksgiving Parades Were Riots
The Fantastics parades were occasions of sometimes-violent revelry
Presidents From Lincoln to FDR Kept the Thanksgiving Tradition Going
Lincoln started the process of making it a federal holiday in 1863, crystallizing something that had been around since the days of the Pilgrims
The Historic Tail of the Weeki Wachee Mermaids
You can even learn to “mermaid” yourself, if the fancy takes you
How Marshmallow-Topped Sweet Potato Casserole Became a Thanksgiving Classic
Sweet potato pudding has been a part of American cuisine for a century
How a New Accent Overturned BBC Tradition and Messed With the Nazis
A man with the name of Wilfred Pickles brought regional dialect to the BBC as part of an anti-Nazi-propaganda strategy
For a Few Decades in the 18th Century, Women and African-Americans Could Vote in New Jersey
Then some politicians got angry
The Real-Life Story of Maria von Trapp
"The Sound of Music" was based on the true story of her life, but it took a few liberties
How the 1970s Created Recycling As We Know It
People recycled before then, but for different reasons
The Story of the Sperry Top-Sider
Paul A. Sperry's innovative boat shoes were inspired by his dog
A Year Before His Presidential Debate, JFK Foresaw How TV Would Change Politics
Television's first iconic president was remarkably prescient on the subject of TV
This Film Version of 'Treasure Island' Gave Us Our Image of Pirates
Avast, you lubbers!
Students Allied Themselves With Robin Hood During This Anti-McCarthyism Movement
The students of the Green Feather Movement caused an on-campus controversy at Indiana University
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