This Nineteenth-Century Genealogist Argued Norse God Odin Was George Washington’s Great-Great-Great... Grandfather
Albert Welles's ideas about whiteness were a reflection of his time, and would be continued into the future
In the 19th Century, You Wouldn’t Want to Be Put on the Treadmill
This grueling nineteenth-century punishment was supposed to provide a torturous lesson about hard work
There Are Museums For Everything–Even Salami
Take a tour of a few places showcasing this international favorite
The Bizarre Story of Piggly Wiggly, the First Self-Service Grocery Store
What's in a name?
Why Peter the Great Established a Beard Tax
Between 1697-1698, the tsar visited Europe in disguise to learn about shipbuilding and Western culture. His verdict? Shave
Freddie Mercury, Musical Genius and Stamp Collector
The singer-songwriter's childhood stamp album offers an insight to his character
A Generation Before ‘On the Road,’ This Classic Championed the American Road Trip
‘Free Air’ was a classic of the interwar generation
Long Before Siri, Emma Nutt's Voice Was on the Other End of the Line
She was the first female telephone operator. Before her, telephone operators were teenaged boys. That didn't go so well
The 1919 Black Sox Baseball Scandal Was Just One of Many
They say baseball "lost its innocence" after 1919, but betting and other improper behavior was rampant in early-20th-century baseball
The First Syphilis Cure Was the First 'Magic Bullet'
The term 'magic bullet' once just meant a targeted drug
The Vacuum Cleaner Was Harder to Invent Than You Might Think
The original vacuum cleaner required a number of improvements before becoming the household staple it is today
The Author of ‘Frankenstein’ Also Wrote a Post-Apocalyptic Plague Novel
‘The Last Man’ was derided in its time for being too grim, but today it would fit in with a growing genre of dystopian fiction
The Case Thurgood Marshall Never Forgot
Fifty years ago today, Thurgood Marshall became a Supreme Court justice. He kept telling the story of the Groveland Four
Chop Suey: An American Classic
Nobody really knows exactly where this dish came from, but it's not China
The Farmboy Who Invented Television
The inventor of television’s career presages many of the good and bad things about Silicon Valley
How Mary Hemingway and JFK Got Ernest Hemingway’s Legacy Out of Cuba
1961, the year Hemingway died, was a complicated year for U.S.-Cuba relations
The Father of Modern Chemistry Proved Respiration Occurred by Freezing a Guinea Pig
Where he got the guinea pig from remains a mystery
Why Amateur Radio Operators Are Watching Hurricane Harvey
Ham radio underwent a resurgence in the United States after Hurricane Katrina
Bite Into the Whys Behind State Fair Food
This American institution has changed a lot, but some things remain just the same
Why the Can Opener Wasn't Invented Until Almost 50 Years After the Can
The first 'can opener' was a hammer and chisel
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