How Alexander Hamilton's House Got Moved
The 298-ton home needed to be lifted 38 feet in the air and then moved 500 feet away. The solution? A few shims and a lot of patience.
The 298-ton home needed to be lifted 38 feet in the air and then moved 500 feet away. The solution? A few shims and a lot of patience.
Something was wrong with the local felines … and soon humans would get sick too.
Get to know the pioneering doctor who's been called "the father of modern surgery" and the namesake of a popular mouthwash.
Promising to take the world title back "home" to Germany, Schmidt became one of the highest-paid—and most-hated—athletes of the 1950s. He was also born in Quebec.
The Voynich is known as the most mysterious manuscript in the world.
Minor household inconveniences haven't changed that much since the '50s.
The agency is looking to make its digitized records more search-friendly.
A previously unpublished story dating back to the 1950s was discovered recently in the author’s archives.
Botanical Sketchbooks, a new book by Helen and William Bynum, collects some of the best drawings of the world's flora dating back to the 15th century.
If you are so much as a leisurely fan of American fiction, you likely already know the story of how Jack Kerouac's 'On the Road' came into the world, but there are many stories about the book's history that might just surprise you.
The legendary filmmaker hired hundreds of extras, trekked miles through the snow, and ate an uncomfortable amount of licorice to make his 1925 masterpiece.
An escape from England, an indentured servant with a mysterious past, and an untimely death while crossing the Atlantic. While these might sound like plot points for the latest historical spy thriller, they’re actually real events related to <em>The Bay P
As Austinites processed their shock and grief, the police worked to nab the perpetrator.
Eventually, school lunch became seen as a way to “eat democracy."
Even 400 years after Shakespeare's death, scholars are still debating.
Throughout history, the city of London has been all but destroyed by fire on more than a dozen different occasions—usually accidentally, sometimes deliberately.
Joseph Dalton Hooker ate penguins and discovered volcanoes on the 1840s expedition.
Here's how your favorite old-school school supply became an icon.
These shipwrecks all have intriguing stories, and they’re all places where you can step foot, although in some cases a boat (and possibly scuba gear) may be necessary. Just remember: Look, don’t touch.
From hosting JFK's last birthday party to becoming a raccoon habitat, this boat has seen it all.
The pants date back to the early 1930s.
Size doesn't always matter.
Jollyville got its name from a person, not a state of mind.
Alfred Kinsey forever changed the way we think, and talk, about sex—partly by asking more than 18,000 men and women deeply personal questions about their most intimate habits.