Events
The World Mourns Jane Goodall: The Woman Who Redefined Humanity Through the Eyes of Chimpanzees
The Passing of a Giant in Science On October 1, 2025, the world awoke to heartbreaking news: Dame Jane Goodall, the legendary primatologist, ethologist, and conservationist, had died at age 91. According to a statement released by the Jane Goodall Institute, she passed away of natural causes while in California, where she had been continuing her tireless speaking engagements even in her ninth decade.
By Lynn Myers4 months ago in History
The Cola Wars: How America Fizzed, Fought, and Foamed From the 50s to the 90s
There are few battles in history that were waged not with bullets, but with bubbles. While empires rose and fell, while presidents debated policy and kids memorized baseball stats, a different kind of war rumbled quietly beneath the surface of American life. It was fought in grocery aisles, TV commercials, vending machines, and lunchboxes. It was Coke versus Pepsi... two titans of taste locked in a struggle for the soul of America.
By The Iron Lighthouse4 months ago in History
The Ethiopian Calendar: Why It's Seven Years Behind the Rest of the World. AI-Generated.
The Ethiopian Calendar: Why It's Seven Years Behind the Rest of the World Have you ever wondered why some people celebrate New Year's in September? Or how a simple date could make you feel younger overnight? Calendars do more than mark days—they tie us to history and culture in ways that shape our world.
By Story silver book 4 months ago in History
Would the Twin Towers Have Survived if the Planes Hit Higher?
The collapse of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001, remains one of the most extensively analyzed structural failures in history. Both planes struck relatively high in the buildings, but what if they had impacted even higher? This article explores whether the Twin Towers might have remained standing had American Airlines Flight 11 and United Airlines Flight 175 struck between floors 100 and 110 instead of their actual impact points.
By Brandon Brasson4 months ago in History
The Forgotten Cold Chain: America’s Iceman Era
There was a time... not so long ago... that the daily hum of American life depended on a man with a horse, a wagon, and a block of frozen water. Before refrigerators, before humming freezers in every garage, there was the iceman. He clomped through neighborhoods at dawn, iron tongs swinging, hoisting hundred-pound slabs into waiting iceboxes. For children, he was a summertime hero. For families, he was survival. For history, he was an empire of frost that melted almost overnight.
By The Iron Lighthouse4 months ago in History
The Black Tag Lady of 9/11. Content Warning.
On September 11, 2001, emergency medical specialist Ernest Armstead worked in the plaza between the Twin Towers. Surrounded by chaos, he moved from victim to victim, marking each with triage tags. Green meant minor injuries. Yellow meant serious but stable. Red meant critical. Black meant dead or soon to be.
By Brandon Brasson4 months ago in History
Gender Parity in U.S. Administrations: A Historical Timeline
The United States has a history of inequality for women, as with most countries. It has a development towards fuller equal rights in law and in practice, as with many other countries. Arguments continue in the US over representation, particularly around the current Administration. Lies or falsehoods have been spread. What is the representation of women in American administrations since the vote?
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen4 months ago in History










