A Union soldier named John J. Williams was the last man to die in the American Civil War.
A Union soldier named John J. Williams was the last man to die in the American Civil War.
Vice President Richard Nixon was attacked by an angry mob in Venezuela. The incident occurred during a goodwill tour of South America.
A team of peatcutters uncovered the body of a young girl who had been in the marsh for 1,700 years.
The main stands at Valley Parade Stadium burst into flames during a match between Bradford City and Lincoln City.
A 34-year-old carpet salesman from Kentucky went for a wild ride on a kite. The flight lasted for 12 hours and covered 390 miles.
A 600-foot freighter slammed into a pier beneath the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Tampa Bay, Florida. 1,400 feet of the bridge collapsed and 35 people were killed
An Irish rogue named Thomas Blood stole the British Crown Jewels from the Tower of London.
Two French aviators attempted the first trans-atlantic flight from Paris to New York. Their fate is one of the greatest aviation mysteries of all time.
She jumped off the Clifton Suspension Bridge that towers 246 feet above the Avon River in England. Miraculously, she survived.
A diver named Etem got his hand stuck inside a giant clam and drowned. The giant pearl he was clutching is now valued at approximately $40,000,000.
His legendary recording gave the world a vivid glimpse inside the terrifying spectacle of the Hindenburg Disaster, but it wasn't entirely accurate.
Seven people died when a state militia fired upon a labor demonstration in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Rolls owned one of England's first car dealerships. Royce was a mechanical engineer who had just built a 2-cylinder car that greatly impressed Rolls.
Garry Kasparov, the reigning chess champion, began a six-game series against the IBM computer known as Deep Blue.
Over 1.3 million of these silver coins were minted starting in 1875, but most of them were melted down before they made it into anybody's pocket.
The last of seven dolphins who starred in the hit TV series Flipper died at the age of 40.
246 people died under the lethal barrage. Most of the victims had been working in the fields when the storm hit without warning.
At 4:10 in the morning a massive chunk of limestone peeled off the east face of Turtle Mountain in Alberta, Canada. In 100 seconds, 90 million tons of rock came crashing down the mountain and buried the sleepy coal mining town of Frank.