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How a Nation Was Born At Lexington and Concord
First blood of the American Revolution was shed April 19, 1775, when the British marched out of Boston to challenge rebel militia
EXCLUSIVE: Read and Hear Kit Carson III Describe the Fate of the Serial-Killing Espinosas
In 1968 the grandson of famed frontiersmen Kit Carson and Tom Tobin shared what he’d been told about the latter’s tense 1863 hunt for the murderous Espinosas
This Man Hunted Down the West’s First Known Serial Killers
Colorado Territory tracker Tom Tobin may not have worn a white hat, but he answered the call to duty in 1863 and hunted down the ‘Bloody Espinosas’
The “Nazi War Machine” Wasn’t Actually That Mechanized
Germany owed its early war successes to radio—but lost the war due to other technological shortcomings.
5 Endangered Floating Museums: Saving the ‘Tin Cans’
There are currently 164 vessels designated as national historic landmarks in the United States — all designed to keep history afloat.
A C-47 Crashed in Germany in 1945—Now Locals Have Erected a Memorial
Citizens in Bavaria remembered an American airplane that went down in the Black Forest
‘On Bloody Sunday’ Book Review
Julieann Moore presents accounts from Catholic and Irish Republican figures involved in the 'Bloody Sunday' killings of Jan. 30, 1972
Why Do British Soldiers Wear Cap Badges, And What Do They Mean?
Each regiment of the British Army has a rich historical lineage reflected by unique cap badges.