At the height of the sailing era, four of the world’s fastest clippers raced home with the season’s precious early cargo of tea
Jack Dempsey boasted he could tear apart a robot opponent “bolt by bolt and scatter its brain wheels and cogs all over the canvas”
A Chess Champion’s Dominance—and Madness
As a young man, Paul Morphy vanquished eight opponents simultaneously while effectively blindfolded
The Midday Ride of Paul Revere
Longfellow made the patriot’s ride to Lexington legendary, but the story of Revere’s earlier trip to Portsmouth deserves to be retold as well
The Unknown Contributions of Brits in the American Civil War
Historian Amanda Foreman discusses how British citizens took part in the war between the Union and the Confederacy
Senator Barry Goldwater Imagines Arizona in the Year 2012
The Republican senator and 1964 presidential candidate predicted the growth of the Sun Belt and envisioned an open border with Mexico
Behind Enemy Lines With Violette Szabo
She was young, married and a mother. But after her husband died in battle against the Nazis, she became a secret agent for the British
Weather Control as a Cold War Weapon
In the 1950s, some U.S. scientists warned that, without immediate action, the Soviet Union would control the earth’s thermometers
Making the Rounds With Santa Claus Smith
For six years, an elderly tramp toured the U.S., paying those who helped him with checks for sums of up to $900,000
Unflinching Portraits of Pearl Harbor Survivors
Seventy years after the day that lives on in infamy, the soldiers stationed at Pearl Harbor recall their experiences
Clarence Darrow: Jury Tamperer?
Newly unearthed documents shed light on claims that the famous criminal attorney bribed a juror
Henry Morton Stanley’s Unbreakable Will
The explorer of Dr. Livingstone-fame provides a classic character study of how willpower works
Frozen in Place: December 1861
President Lincoln addresses the State of the Union and grows impatient with General McClellan
Winfrey steps aside after a decade, Caruso steps in
The Sentimental Ballad of the Civil War
Forget “Dixie,” it was one New Yorker’s “Home Sweet Home” that was the song most beloved by Union and Confederate soldiers
A Thanksgiving Meal (in-a-pill)
The future of food was envisioned by many prognosticators as entirely meatless and often synthetic
The Monocled World War II Interrogator
Robin “Tin Eye” Stephens became known for “breaking” captured German spies without laying a hand on them
Page 243 of 300