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RealClearHistory Friday
The Civil War’s first year was one marked by inactivity and battlefield frustration. There was just one major battle, at Bull Run, and... Read More
The serene turquoise waters of the Mediterranean Sea hide a sharp-tasting secret: a layer of salt up to two miles thick, lurking deep... Read More
On 20 April 1861, when Virginia authorities took over the Norfolk Navy Yard after its evacuatuation by Federal forces, they found, among... Read More
A series of meetings were held between an Associated Press correspondent, Mr. George L. Seese, and a Villista agent. The agent wanted to... Read More
The improbable voyage of the schooner Amistad and the court proceedings and diplomatic maneuverings that resulted from that voyage form one... Read More
On 10 March 1959 an anti-Chinese and anti-Communist popular revolt erupted in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, which had been under the reign of... Read More
Antisemitism and the persecution of Jews were central tenets of Nazi ideology. In their 25-point party program published in 1920, Nazi Party... Read More
THE COVER OF TIME MAGAZINE (April 9 1952) showed a photo of Batista with a Cuban flag behind him, and the caption: "Cuba's Batista: he... Read More
Ruth Handler (November 4, 1916–April 27, 2002) was an American inventor who created the iconic Barbie doll in 1959 (the doll was named... Read More
When Jerry Garcia passed away in 1995, Volkswagen remembered the Grateful Dead frontman by running an ad featuring a VW Microbus with a tear... Read More
2000 years before the Pyramids and Stonehenge, we have evidence of man’s presence in the ‘Cave of Darkness’ – Ghar... Read More
YAROSLAVL, Russia — The mayor of Burlington, Vt., wrote to a Soviet counterpart in a provincial city that he wanted the United States... Read More
An extremely rare 1854 $5 gold coin could sell for millions of dollars when it is auctioned this month. The 1854-S half eagle coin was struck... Read More
Even as a child, Hosni Mubarak, the future pilot and president of Egypt, was always looking to the sky. In rural Mounifa in the Nile Delta in... Read More
In September 1914, less than a month into the First World War, the military destiny of the Habsburg Empire hung in the balance. Only weeks... Read More
A lot of people were wrong about the 2016 election, but David Plouffe face-planted harder than most. An instrumental adviser to Barack... Read More
Tensions in the American colonies were rising. For one, the British Parliament’s 1765 Stamp Act required colonists to pay an extra fee... Read More
In his new book, “Epidemics and Society: From the Black Death to the Present,” Frank M. Snowden, a professor emeritus of history... Read More
A question like that is sure to get the blood of any hard-core aviation enthusiast or history aficionado boiling in a hurry. There is... Read More
I've always believed that when you try to acquire information about events that happened years ago; the best thing to do is look for... Read More
When Mexican troops stormed the former mission known as the Alamo on the morning of March 6, 1836, Mexican General Antonio López de... Read More
The Missouri Compromise was passed into law in 1820 and regulated slavery in the western states. Though it was passed forty-one years before... Read More
Bomber Command had come a long way since the desperate days of 1940 when they were flying twin engined bombers and sustaining terrible... Read More
A Soviet politician and close associate of Stalin, Malenkov was the virtual head of the USSR in 1953-1955. Georgy Malenkov was born in... Read More
January and early Febmary, 1862 was a busy period for BrigadierGeneral Samuel R. Curtis, recently appointed commander of the Armyof the... Read More
On March 8, 1966, Nelson's Pillar, in Dublin city, was blown up. The question is, how did it take 157 years?For many, the biggest surprise... Read More
It’s pretty possible that you’ve heard at least one of the following “immortal” quotes at some point during your... Read More
On March 10, 1876, in Boston, Massachusetts, Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone. Thomas Watson fashioned the device itself; a crude... Read More

World War II was the greatest conflict in history, carried out on a scale almost impossible to grasp. In many ways it was the first modern war, in which airpower played a vital role both on land and at sea, but many actions were ultimately won by the determination and grit of the foot soldier. Here\'s the whole vast panoramic epic of the Second World War presented in 20 of its most significant bat... Read More
After the clashes and white supremacist terror attack in Charlottesville, Virginia, the latest dimension of our unfolding national meltdown is over monuments to the Confederacy. In retaliation for the violence in Charlottesville, demonstrators pulled down a Confederate statue in Durham, several cities in the North quickly yanked theirs down, and several other places are considering the same thing.... Read More
ill Wine-Banks has seen the Donald Trump story before — at least in a manner of speaking. It played out for her in 1973, when she became the first and only woman serving on the Watergate prosecution team. As she writes in her new book, "The Watergate Girl: My Fight for Truth and Justice Against a Criminal President," Donald Trump reminds her of Richard Nixon, "corrupt, amoral, vindictive, pa... Read More