Top Stories
Stories in History that you’ll love, handpicked by our team.
Fox Hole
November 9th, 1918 Dearest Kathleen, Snow came to wipe the sins of man. With it, the harsh punishment of blistering cold. Despite the heavy layers of white, it will never wash away the blood. Its stains are the remembrance of how far men will go when they believe the righteousness in what they’re fighting for.
By Hyde Wunderli 2 years ago in History
In The 6ix: A Black Baker Rises to the Top. Runner-Up in History Would’ve Burned This Page Challenge.
The man made good cakes. And following an apprenticeship, he got a job as a baker. It was 1861, he was nineteen years old. It wasn’t his first job - he’d been working since he was a kid to pay for school supplies - and it wouldn’t be his last. For the next sixteen years he kneaded dough, decorated cakes, baked pies. Then, he started driving horse-drawn cabs for his uncle’s livery stable. Years later, at the age of fifty-two, he became Toronto’s first Black elected politician.
By Marie Wilson5 years ago in History
Chasing Myself
I'm not old. I hope to be one day, but I suppose everyone does, in some way or another. Most people don't fantasize of wrinkles or denture cream or canes, practical shoes or non-slip bath mats. I can't say I've ever daydreamed about what retirement home any future family will put me in. I can only hope I make it that far.
By Caitlin Mitchell2 years ago in History
One Woman's Survival in the Soviet Gulag Camps
Else Rutgers is ninety-two and was one of the very few foreign nationals who survived the Soviet Gulag camps. Gulag camps began in the Soviet Union in 1919 and were a system of concentration and correctional labour camps.
By Sam H Arnold2 years ago in History
The 12 Days of Christmas Controversy
Some people are positive that today is the first day of the 12 Days of Christmas... Partridge in a Pear Tree and all that. To them- this will be an awkward read that might get them a bit 'het up'. Nonetheless, we will carry forward.
By Judey Kalchik 2 years ago in History
The Posthumous Execution of Oliver Cromwell
Some events from history are so strange that we should all take a moment, look back, and collectively say WTF. This is one of those. It's about a man so hated that his corpse was dug up for the sole purpose of mutilating it because being dead wasn't good enough (bad enough?) for those who hated him. Can you think of anything more hate-fueled that could happen to a dead body?
By J.A. Hernandez2 years ago in History
Rest In Peace Sweet Camelot
Stop and go traffic on route 28 heading to Cape Cod on a steamy and sticky August afternoon, would make most people hot under the collar. Not on this day because Eddie and his “with child” wife Brenda were windows open and radio blaring the Tyme’s song
By David X. Sheehan2 years ago in History
The Transcendentalists
The town of Concord, Massachusetts was where the first gunshots were fired in the Revolutionary War. On April the 19th 1775, more than a year before the Declaration of Independence was signed, British troops marched on Concord to seize a cache of weapons hidden there. Local residents and farmers, alerted mere hours in advance by Paul Revere and William Dawes, organized into a militia now known as the Minutemen and met the British with armed resistance. In a firefight at Concord’s Old North Bridge, the advancing troops were turned back.
By Doc Sherwood2 years ago in History
The Tower of London Zoo
Many of you will be familiar with The Tower of London, its fame as the world's largest jewellery box is well known. Some will also know that this was the site of two famous beheadings, both of them at the request of King Henry VIII when he asked for his wife's heads to be removed.
By Sam H Arnold2 years ago in History









