Robert Smalls: The Slave Who Stole a Confederate Ship and Became a Congressman
To save his family—and himself—Robert Smalls had to do something drastic. His bravery made him a folk hero.
To save his family—and himself—Robert Smalls had to do something drastic. His bravery made him a folk hero.
A teenage art prodigy managed to steal half an hour with Abraham Lincoln every day—for five months.
For more than 90 years, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has rewarded excellence on the big screen—and they've seen plenty of historic firsts over the decades.
Nearly 5000 couples per year still tie the knot in Gretna Green, the verdant Scottish village that Jane Austen loved to write about.
Read on to discover which American president wanted to be a concert violinist, which carried a dictionary around in his pocket, who burned his official White House portrait, and why Joe Biden's dog is making history.
On February 9, 1964, The Beatles—identified in a press release as a wildly popular quartet of English recording stars—performed on 'The Ed Sullivan Show' in New York City and changed the course of music history.
With Civil War triumphs and business failures, Sherman remains a controversial figure to this day.
Friedlieb Ferdinand Runge, the subject of a a new Google doodle, is the German chemist who identified caffeine.
Instead of getting a day off in October, municipal workers in the city will get a day off in November, on Election Day.
The Watercolour World website catalogues more than 80,000 paintings from the 1400s through the 1800s.
Whether you follow the competitors closely or just live-stream the pup parade, the Westminster Dog Show wins "Cutest in Show" every time.
Greek leader Alexander the Great had a pretty miserable death. A new theory says he may have been paralyzed—yet still conscious—for six days after he was pronounced dead.
Mali's king Mansa Musa embodied the wealth of West Africa before the Atlantic slave trade, as seen in "Caravans of Gold."
Queen Elizabeth II was one of history's most popular British rulers, but she very nearly missed the gig.
It was the princess's favorite dress.
Rosa Parks is best known for her historic arrest, but that's not the only accomplishment she should be remembered for.
It was left there on purpose in the 1990s.
In 1972, Bhutan released a set of stamps that could be used to mail a letter—or be played on a turntable.
Punxsutawney Phil's moniker might have something to do with the royal family, a pair of heinous groundhog murders, and some good old-fashioned small-town competition.
She was one of the first women to join the Navy's flight program and the first to fly a tactical fighter jet.
Want to be the smartest person in the room while watching this year's Super Bowl? Bust out a few of these fun facts about Big Games past.
While Truth wasn't her real name, 19th-century abolitionist and feminist Sojourner Truth made it her life's mission.
She was practically born a queen.
Under any circumstances: Do. Not. Fart.