Trade Your Trouble for a Bubble
Sightseeing across the country in an atomic-powered “pleasure ball”
Moving Sidewalks Before The Jetsons
The public’s fascination with the concept of “movable pavement” extends back more than 130 years
How Newspapers Reported the Civil War
A collection of historic front pages shows how civilians experienced and read about the war
Mobsters Tremble Before the Crime-Fighting, Red Flying Gondola
Science-fiction pioneer Hugo Gernsback predicted that, as long as police officers were stuck on terra firma, criminals always would have the edge
The Epic Struggle to Tunnel Under the Thames
No one had ever tunneled under a major river before Marc Brunel began a shaft below London’s river in the 1820s
John M. Barry on Roger Williams and the Indians
The founder of Rhode Island often helped out the early colonists in their dealings with Native Americans
God, Government and Roger Williams’ Big Idea
The Puritan minister originated a principle that remains contentious to this day—separation of church and state
The Doomed South Pole Voyage’s Remaining Photographs
A 1912 photograph proves explorer Captain Robert Scott reached the South Pole—but wasn’t the first
Whether as a tourist, an outcast or a pilgrim, traveling is discovering
Scientific progress during the 20th century prompted a number of predictions about an impending cure
Friends in the House, Hostility at Home
Coya Knutson won a seat in the U.S. House in 1954 but was undone by a secret she brought to Washington
A special visit from the Ghost of Christmas Retro-Future
The Story of the WWI Christmas Truce
It has become a great legend of World War I. But what really happened when British and German troops emerged from their trenches that Christmas Day?
The Great Dissenter and His Half-Brother
John Harlan championed racial justice on a hostile Supreme Court. Robert Harlan, a freed slave, achieved renown despite the court’s decisions
Brain Pickings’ Top 11 History Books of the Year
The editor behind the site that curates the best content on the web lists the most interesting history books of 2011
The Fanciful, Chocolate-Filled World of 2012
In 1912, the French chocolate company Lombart printed a series of six collectible cards envisioning daily life one hundred years in the future
Giant Automatic Highway Builders of the Future
Radebaugh’s vision of a road-creating machine may not have been a figment of just his imagination- a Disney-produced television program had a similar idea
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