Two cryptographers working for the National Security Agency left the United States and never returned. William Martin and Bernon Mitchell defected to the Soviet Union.
In the world's longest tennis match, John Isner defeated Nicoloas Mahut in the first round at Wimbledon after 11 hours and 5 minutes of play that stretched over 3 days and 183 games.
In June of 1969, Cleveland's heavily polluted Cuyahoga River caught fire. The fire quickly spread and at its peak the flames were 5 stories high.
4 or 5 doughnut-shaped crafts were flying in formation directly above Harold Dahl's boat when one of them started dropping strange, rocky, slag-like material.
Maximilian's rise to power was the ill-conceived brainchild of Napoleon III who sought to extend French imperial power
Eratosthenes was the guy who came up with the science we know as Geography, and he was the first person to prove that the Earth was round.
This half-woman, half-fish oddity would become one of his most popular sideshow attractions of all time.
5 English monks witnessed an amazing spectacle. They saw what appeared to be "two horns of light" on the shaded part of the Moon.
Mumtaz Mahal, the beloved Empress of India, died while giving birth to her fourteenth child.
Clement Vallandigham was an outspoken anti-war, pro-Confederate democrat. He came up with the snappy slogan, "To maintain the Constitution as it is, and to restore the Union as it was."
It was on a rainy night in 1816 that a bunch of friends gathered at a summer house near Lake Geneva. Their collective creativity would mark a pivotal moment in horror history.
A mysterious flaming blob flew into Traven Matchett's backyard in southern Ontario. The fiery object nearly hit his nineteen-year-old daughter, Donna, in the head.
On this day Ella Fitzgerald spent her last morning listening to birds in the backyard of her Beverly Hills home.
A French physician named Jean-Baptiste Denys gave a 15-year-old boy about 12 ounces of sheep blood.
Jean Baptiste Kleber was one of the greatest generals from the French Revolutionary Wars. He died when an assassin plunged a knife into his heart.
During his 22-year reign as the King of Bavaria, Ludwig II earned a reputation as a wild eccentric who loved to build fantastic castles. His death was extremely suspicious.