The Fates of 7 Grisly Assassination Artifacts
Here's where to see the top hat Abraham Lincoln wore on his final night, and more.
Here's where to see the top hat Abraham Lincoln wore on his final night, and more.
She was known on the streets as Moll Cutpurse, for the purse strings she slashed.
A new book collects the incredible visualizations he created for the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris.
It was 80 years ago that a radio broadcast caused the public to panic ... but did it really?
His job was to protect the birds. But nobody was there to protect him.
It was one of Parkers Brothers' most popular board games in the 1960s. Then came the accusations that the toy's makers were marketing the occult to kids.
Fellow history buffs will thank you.
While most horror movies are complete works of fiction, the genre occasionally offers up stories that are based on terrifying real-life events.
Pablo Picasso completed his first painting at age 9. Find out even more about one of the world's most important artists.
When oppressive laws stopped Danes from flying the flag of Denmark, they found a new way to sport their country's colors—a pig.
Nearly 600 works of Nazi propaganda are tucked away under lock and key at Fort Belvoir.
Among the American Revolution's many heroes, Crispus Attucks is immortalized as the "first to defy, the first to die."
She never expected the dish to be so popular.
A nearly identical replica of the doomed 'Titanic' is scheduled to make its maiden voyage in 2022. Who's ready to tempt fate?
It's believed to be the world's oldest intact shipwreck.
In 1996, the treat was declared the official dessert of Massachusetts, cementing its place in our cookbooks—and taste buds—for good.
Get your cholera-themed beverages right here!
When is a potato chip not a potato chip? For two years, Britain's court system pondered this most mysterious question.
His name became synonymous with ruthless scheming—but was this Florentine philosopher of the Renaissance really that bad?
It's taller than the Empire State Building.
Way back when, chemistry sets were stocked with poison and blowtorches, all in the name of education.