The Last Two Veterans Of WWI
Nearly 10,000,000 men were killed in the conflict, 65 million participated, and now we are left with two.
Nearly 10,000,000 men were killed in the conflict, 65 million participated, and now we are left with two.
Evan Fleischer The Awl May 2011 30min Permalink
In June, 1942, a German submarine dropped four young Nazi agents off on a Florida beach. Their mission was to blow up bridges, factories, and Jewish-owned department stores. Among them was Herbert Haupt, the 22-year-old son of a German-American family in Chicago.
Richard Cahan Chicago Magazine Feb 2002 Permalink
When they met, he was 45 and she was 17. In her 14 years as his mistress, she appeared in countless paintings, including Guernica.
John Richardson Vanity Fair May 2011 15min Permalink
The Civil War started 150 years ago today. A primer on how and why.
When Chicago’s Stevens Hotel opened in 1927, it was the biggest hotel in the world. By the time it was closed, it had bankrupted and caused the suicide of a member of the Stevens’ family (which included a seven-year-old future Justice John Paul Stevens), and changed the city forever.
Charles Lane Chicago Magazine Aug 2006 Permalink
The strange life of Boston Corbett, the soldier who killed John Wilkes Booth in 1865.
Ernest B. Ferguson The American Scholar Apr 2009 15min Permalink
Like hundreds of other local slaves — [they] had been pressed into service by the Confederates, compelled to build an artillery emplacement amid the dunes across the harbor. They labored beneath the banner of the 115th Virginia Militia, a blue flag bearing a motto in golden letters: “Give me liberty or give me death.”
Adam Goodheart New York Times Magazine Mar 2011 20min Permalink
Why utopias are best understood as fiction games, and how they quickly become dystopias when realized.
Paul LaFarge Bookforum Jun 2010 15min Permalink
Best Article Crime History Science
In the 1880’s, a shabbily dressed man popped up in numerous America cities, calling upon local scientists, showing letters of introduction claiming he was a noted geologist or paleontologist, discussing both fields at a staggeringly accomplished level, and then making off with valuable books or cash loans.
- Skulls in the Stars Feb 2011 30min Permalink
After the 1919 Black Sox scandal, Ring Lardner, America’s first great sportswriter, walked away from the game.
Douglas Goetsch The American Scholar Apr 2011 25min Permalink
The long, happy, surprising life of 77-year old Donald Gary Triplett, the first person ever diagnosed with autism.
Caren Zucker, John Donvan The Atlantic Apr 2011 30min Permalink
The definitive story of a ubiquitous software. PowerPoint’s origins, its evolution, and its mind-boggling impact on corporate culture.
Ian Parker New Yorker May 2001 20min Permalink
Best Article History Tech Media
The challenges facing the historians of the internet.
Ariel Bleicher IEEE Spectrum Mar 2011 15min Permalink
The abridged history of a Brooklyn culture war.
Christopher Glazek n+1 Feb 2011 15min Permalink
From the Greeks to George Lucas, 2,200 years of failure.
Becky Ferreira The Awl Feb 2011 25min Permalink
On the illusion of the inevitable and the revolutions that ended the Eastern Bloc.
Timothy Garton Ash New York Review of Books Nov 2009 20min Permalink
A quasi-oral history of the party that was JFK’s 1961 inauguration.
Todd S. Purdum Vanity Fair Feb 2011 25min Permalink
Arnold Weiss escaped Germany as a kid in 1938, leaving his family behind. He returned seven years later, now a U.S. intelligence officer tasked with tracking down fugitive Nazis. The ultimate revenge story.
Matthew Brzezinski Washington Post Jul 2005 35min Permalink
The author of True Grit on growing up in Arkansas during World War II.
Charles Portis The Atlantic Dec 1969 Permalink
“Most cities spread like inkblots; a few, such as Manhattan, grew in linear increments. Paris expanded in concentric rings, approximately shown by the spiral numeration of its arrondissements.”
Luc Sante New York Review of Books Dec 2010 Permalink
An archaeology of debt.
David Graeber Triple Canopy Dec 2010 Permalink
The history of a Japanese archipelago and its inhabitants, through rebellions and famine, a 20th century exodus for prostitution work across Asia, and finally depopulation and isolation.
Richard Hendy Spike Japan Nov 2010 25min Permalink
The story of John F. Kennedy’s assassination, written and published the following week.
An oral history of a family in Mexico City, in transition from poverty to the lower-middle class, as they scramble to organize the burial of a slum-dwelling aunt.
Oscar Lewis New York Review of Books Sep 1969 40min Permalink
A history of entrepreneurship in New York City, starting with shipping magnate Jeremiah Thompson’s big gamble in the 1820s: scheduled departures.
Edward L. Glaeser City Journal Nov 2010 20min Permalink