How to Eat Like a Pirate on International Talk Like a Pirate Day
While we all have a communal sense of how pirates talked, our sense of how pirates ate lies, by comparison, in uncharted waters
The Women Who Mapped the Universe and Still Couldn’t Get Any Respect
At the beginning of the 20th century, a group of women known as the Harvard Observatory computers helped revolutionize the science of astronomy
The Writer Who Built the World’s First Engine-Powered Submarine
Narcis Monturiol loved the ocean’s corals so much, that he built a machine so he could better enjoy them
From Cat Food to Sushi Counter: The Strange Rise of the Bluefin Tuna
The fish can sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars each. But just 45 years ago, big bluefin tuna were caught for fun, killed and ground into pet food
Remembering 9/11: Maria Cecilia Benavente’s Sandals
Maria Cecilia Benavente escaped Tower Two barefoot; in shock, she held onto her sandals
Top 10 Biggest Roadside Foods in America
Where is the world’s biggest pistachio?
The Football Star and the Wrath of his Would-Be Bride
What could a wounded woman do? For one thing, she could sue
Remembering 9/11: Brooklyn Squad 1 Fire Truck Door
This door is from a FDNY rescue pumper truck destroyed in the World Trade Center collapse. Squad 1 lost 12 members on September 11
Following in the Footsteps of Balboa
The first European to glimpse the Pacific from the Americas crossed Panama on foot 500 years ago. Our intrepid author retraces his journey
This 1,600-Year-Old Goblet Shows that the Romans Were Nanotechnology Pioneers
Researchers have finally found out why the jade-green cup appears red when lit from behind
Slurred Lines: Great Cocktail Moments in Famous Literature
Fancy drinks like the Gimlet and the Brandy Alexander have high class histories
The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
The Family Plot to Kill Lincoln
Mary and John Surratt helped John Wilkes Booth assassinate Abraham Lincoln and then paid the ultimate penalty for their actions
American Cities: Before and After
This Interactive Map Compares the New York City of 1836 to Today
Manhattan had a very different topography than the concrete jungle we know today
American Cities: Before and After
When the Lincoln Memorial Was Underwater
James Keily’s 1851 map of Washington shows a considerably smaller district, before the Potomac River was filled in to make way for monuments
American Cities: Before and After
Before There Could Be a Los Angeles, There Had to be Water
California’s first state engineer, along with a team of surveyors, created this hand drawn map in 1880 to explore Los Angeles’ water resources
American Cities: Before and After
When Real Estate Plotters Planned Out Denver
Bankers and speculators in the Colorado capital used this 1879 map to explore the Mile High City’s real estate potential
American Cities: Before and After
What Did San Francisco Look Like in the Mid-1800s?
A look at a sailing chart of San Francisco and its bay, made in 1859 by the fledgling US Coast Survey
What Did Chicago Look Like Before the Great Fire?
This 1868 pocket map of Chicago shows the city in full-blown expansion, a mere 3 years before the infamous blaze
Document Deep Dive: A Play-by-Play of the March on Washington
Fifty years after the historic event, take a look at the lineup of speakers who addressed the crowd of 250,000 at the Lincoln Memorial
Eating on the March: Food at the 1963 March on Washington
Organizing an event that large was a formidable task in and of itself. Tackling the issue of handling food for the masses was another issue entirely
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