The Bell Cemeteries of World War 2

Jun 21, 2021

Nearly every German family in every German town contributed something to the two World Wars. For many, it was their men. For others, it was ...

One-Million-Liter Test Sphere

Jun 18, 2021

Tucked away at a corner of Fort Detrick in Frederick, Maryland, dwarfed by buildings on three, sides stands a relic of Cold War—a humongous ...

How a Solar Storm Set Off Sea Mines During The Vietnam War

Jun 17, 2021

Buried deep within the archives of the US Navy, lied a mystery that was only recently solved. On August 4, 1972, dozens of naval mines that ...

The Flying Tanks of World War 2

Jun 16, 2021

Dropping supplies including combat vehicles to troops on the ground was one of the biggest achievements of the military during World War 2. ...

The Bridge Built By Women

Jun 15, 2021

When the Waterloo Bridge over River Thames opened in the December 1945, Deputy Prime Minister, Herbert Morrison spoke on its inauguration: ...

The Degenerate Art Exhibition of 1937

Jun 14, 2021

Not everybody gets modern art. From Andy Warhol’s Soup Cans to a banana stuck to the wall , there are plenty of examples from the perplexin...

HMS Diamond Rock: The Stone Frigate

Jun 11, 2021

South of Martinique, an island in the eastern Caribbean Sea, lies a small basalt island called Diamond Rock. With an imposing peak of 175 me...

The Citadel of Bam: The World’s Largest Mud Building

Jun 10, 2021

Sometime between 579 and 323 BC during the Achaemenid Persian period, the Citadel of Bam (in Persian Arg-é Bam) was built in southeastern pr...

The Maharaja’s Well

Jun 9, 2021

We think that charity always flows from the richer nations to the poorer ones, but sometimes it also flows the other way. When Ireland was s...

Sears Mail-Order Homes

Jun 8, 2021

What’s the heaviest thing you can buy from Amazon? The internet says it’s a 1,500-pound, 6-feet tall gun safe , but back when Sears was the ...

The Exiled Bell of Uglich

Jun 7, 2021

When Ivan the Terrible died in 1584, he left behind two sons, neither of whom was suitable to carry forward their father’s heirloom. One was...

Dulmial: The Village of World War Heroes

Jun 3, 2021

A small Pakistani village located about 150 kilometers south of Islamabad is home to a proud monument—a 19th century cannon gifted by the Br...

The Great Sheep Panic of 1888

Jun 2, 2021

Sheep are notoriously timid and nervous animal, and can get startled easily. But what mysterious provocation could have caused thousands of ...

Britain’s Secret Fuel Pipelines

Jun 2, 2021

How do airline companies procure fuel for their fleet? In the UK at least, the fuel comes through pipelines delivered directly at the airpor...

Clarence E. Willard: The Man of Could Grow at Will

Jun 1, 2021

In 1913, while in England, Clarence E. Willard had to renew his passport in order to travel, and most importantly, in order for him to retur...

Propeller Driven Railways

May 31, 2021

A locomotive can derive power from many different sources. The earliest locomotives were driven by steam. Then came electric trains powered ...

The Ni'ihau Incident

May 28, 2021

Ni'ihau is the smallest of the inhabited islands in the Hawaiian archipelago, privately owned since the 19th century and which would hav...

The Richest Ancient Shipwreck

May 26, 2021

In 1975, a fishing boat working in the southwestern sea of Korean peninsula, near the Shinan Islands, caught six pieces of Chinese ceramic w...

The Air Conditioned Village

May 26, 2021

Air conditioning is ubiquitous these days, but not too long ago cool air was considered a luxury available only in commercial businesses. Th...

Mr. Bean’s Failed Assassination Attempt of The Queen

May 25, 2021

The closest Mr. Bean came to killing the Queen was when he headbutted the head of the British Royal family. The Queen was hurt but survived...