In the 19th century, an enormous hedge ran for more than a thousand miles across India, installed by the British to enforce a tax on salt. Though it took a… Read the rest of the article: In the 1800s, Britain grew a thousand-mile hedge across India
In the 19th century, an enormous hedge ran for more than a thousand miles across India, installed by the British to enforce a tax on salt. Though it took a… Read the rest of the article: In the 1800s, Britain grew a thousand-mile hedge across India
In 1868, Scottish sailor Jack Renton found himself the captive of a native people in the Solomon Islands, but through luck and skill he rose to become a respected warrior… Read the rest of the article: In 1868 a Scottish castaway had to make a new life among the people of the Solomon Islands
In 1968, Richard Proenneke left his career as a heavy equipment operator and took up an entirely new existence. He flew to a remote Alaskan lake, built a log cabin… Read the rest of the article: Richard Proenneke lived alone for 30 years in the Alaskan wilderness in a cabin he built himself
Confined in a Soviet prison camp in 1941, Polish painter Józef Czapski chose a unique way to cope: He lectured to the other prisoners on Marcel Proust's novel In Search… Read the rest of the article: Using literature to retain your humanity in a Soviet prison camp
In May 1840 London was scandalized by the murder of Lord William Russell, who'd been found in his bed with his throat cut. The evidence seemed to point to an… Read the rest of the article: In 1840 London was scandalized when Lord William Russell was found dead in bed with his throat cut
In 1934, two Englishwomen set out to do what no one had ever done before: travel the length of Africa on a motorcycle. In this week's episode of the Futility… Read the rest of the article: In 1934, two women set out to travel the length of Africa by motorcycle
The second-bloodiest riot in the history of New York was touched off by a dispute between two Shakespearean actors. Their supporters started a brawl that killed as many as 30… Read the rest of the article: An 1849 dispute between two actors led to one of the bloodiest riots in New York history
In 1855 a band of London thieves set their sights on a new target: the South Eastern Railway, which carried gold bullion to the English coast. The payoff could be… Read the rest of the article: In 1855, a band of London thieves pulled off the first great train robbery
In 1943 an isolated sledge patrol came upon a secret German weather station in northeastern Greenland. The discovery set off a series of dramatic incidents that unfolded across 400 miles… Read the rest of the article: During World War II, an isolated sledge patrol in Greenland came upon a secret team of Germans
In 1930 Harold Lasseter claimed he'd discovered an enormous deposit of gold in the remote interior of Australia, and a small group of men set off into the punishing desert… Read the rest of the article: For 90 years, fortune hunters have been seeking a legendary outcrop of gold in the Australian desert
In 1914, 132 sealers found themselves stranded on a North Atlantic icefield as a bitter blizzard approached. Thinly dressed and with little food, they faced a harrowing night on the… Read the rest of the article: In 1914, 132 Newfoundland sealers were trapped on the ice during a blizzard
In 1947 actress Gay Gibson disappeared from her cabin on an ocean liner off the coast of West Africa. The deck steward, James Camb, admitted to pushing her body out… Read the rest of the article: Actress Gay Gibson met a mysterious death on an ocean liner in 1947
In June 1940, German forces took the Channel Islands, a small British dependency off the coast of France. They expected the occupation to go easily, but they hadn't reckoned on… Read the rest of the article: During World War II, a 56-year-old British noblewoman stood up to Nazi occupiers on the tiny island of Sark
In 1800 a 12-year-old boy emerged from a forest in southern France, where he had apparently lived alone for seven years. His case was taken up by a young Paris… Read the rest of the article: In 1800, a wild boy emerged from a forest in southern France, where he'd lived alone for 7 years
In 1830 Joseph Palmer created an odd controversy in Fitchburg, Massachusetts: He wore a beard when beards were out of fashion. For this social sin he was shunned, attacked, and… Read the rest of the article: In 1830, Joseph Palmer was persecuted for the social sin of wearing a beard
In 1904 a Manhattan church outing descended into horror when a passenger steamboat caught fire on the East River. More than a thousand people struggled to survive as the captain… Read the rest of the article: New York's deadliest disaster before 9/11 was a 1904 steamboat fire that killed over a thousand people
In 1944, an American soldier discovered a Yorkshire terrier in an abandoned foxhole in New Guinea. Adopted by an Army photographer, she embarked on a series of colorful adventures that… Read the rest of the article: In 1944, an American soldier discovered a Yorkshire terrier in a New Guinea foxhole
In 1954 a social psychologist started a war between two teams of fifth graders at an Oklahoma summer camp. He wanted to investigate the sources of human conflict and how… Read the rest of the article: In 1954, a social psychologist started a war between fifth graders
Here are six new lateral thinking puzzles to test your wits and stump your friends — play along with us as we try to untangle some perplexing situations using yes-or-no… Read the rest of the article: Six lateral thinking puzzles
The first woman to circumnavigate the world did so dressed as a man. In 1766, 26-year-old Jeanne Baret joined a French expedition hoping to conceal her identity for three years.… Read the rest of the article: The first woman to circle the world did so disguised as a man