Stories from Eli Wizevich
Two Orphaned Siberian Tigers Reunite as Mates After a 120-Mile Trek Through Russian Wilderness
Conservationists hope the love story between Boris and Svetlaya might indicate a new, successful chapter in tiger repopulation efforts
Francis Drake’s successful voyage included British sailors’ arrival in California and the plundering of a glut of Spanish riches that sustained Elizabeth I’s empire
Biologists say mating, climate change or simply being confused might have driven the creature to swim great distances, between Colombia and Zanzibar
Meet the Mysterious and Brooding Norwegian Painter Responsible for ‘The Scream’
Born on this day in 1863, Edvard Munch lived a life marked by mental health struggles and sought to brush themes of anxiety and dread into his art
Named “Ninumbeehan dookoodukah” by Eastern Shoshone students and elders, the creature burrowed in riverbeds to stay moist during extreme droughts
Scandal dogged Edward VIII, a suspected Nazi sympathizer, even after he relinquished his crown to marry Wallis Simpson, the woman he loved
It was immediately controversial that President Theodore Roosevelt, famous for vigorous military interventions, was the first statesman to win the Peace Prize
After November 2024 was the second warmest November in the books, experts say the year is “effectively certain” to break the heat record set by 2023
Chaotic Traffic From Horse-Drawn Carriages Inspired the World’s First Traffic Lights
Initial reactions to the signal, installed in London on this day in 1868, were mixed. Then, a freak accident scrapped the project entirely after just a month
Despite this historic first, the identity of the first professional English actress on stage remains a theatrical mystery
Piloting the new technology was a risky move in front of the national audience that watched the Army-Navy showdown on this day in 1963
For over a century, ever since the bust was found on this day in 1912, the world has debated who should rightfully own this work of timeless beauty
On this day in 1952, buses stood still, cars were abandoned in the street, and residents couldn’t see even a few feet in front of themselves as the lethal Great Smog descended on the city
Speculation about what happened to the “Mary Celeste,” found empty on this day in 1872, was so rife that even famed author Arthur Conan Doyle wrote a sensational short story about it
A web of technical failures, human errors and corporate malpractice in Bhopal, India, culminated in an unthinkable tragedy on this day in 1984
The Little-Known Story Behind the Oldest Surviving Synagogue in America
Through revolution and war, Touro Synagogue, which opened in Newport, Rhode Island, on this day in 1763, has long been a beacon for religious tolerance on the coast of New England
A “corrupt bargain” that delivered John Quincy Adams the presidency ended the Era of Good Feelings and prompted a new period of partisan hostility
When London’s Iconic Crystal Palace Burned to the Ground in a Devastating Fire
Three years before World War II, on this day in 1936, an inferno marked the symbolic end of the global hegemony of the British Empire
The 1729 attack in present-day Mississippi was part of a vicious cycle of violence and retribution
Held on this day in 1895, the 54-mile round trip took more than ten hours and involved accidents with streetcars, horses and snowbanks
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