All hell broke loose as one of the biggest quakes to ever hit the east coast left 60 people dead.
All hell broke loose as one of the biggest quakes to ever hit the east coast left 60 people dead.
Max Factor was a cosmetics pioneer who rose from rags to riches and became famous around the world.
In 1907 two massive sections of the bridge snapped off and plunged over 300 feet into the Saint Lawrence River.
In 1859 a semi-retired train conductor named Edwin Drake engineered the world's first successful oil drilling operation.
Lon Chaney is most remembered for his iconic roles as Quasimodo, the deformed bell ringer in The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and as Erik in The Phantom of the Opera.
An Austrian girl was held captive for 8 years by a creepy loner named Wolfgang Priklopil.
One of the most infamous brawls in baseball history happened at Candlestick Park during a game between the San Francisco Giants and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The exiled Russian Bolshevik was assassinated by a Soviet agent named Ramon Mercader.
These were the first living creatures (that we know of) that journeyed into space and returned alive.
Many regard this comment as the spark that ignited the Dakota War of 1862, an incredibly bloody campaign of terror that claimed the lives of up to 800 white settlers.
A priest named Urbain Grandier was burned alive after a notorious trial that included a remarkable piece of evidence - a document signed by Satan himself.
Ben Abruzzo, Maxie Anderson and Larry Newman crossed the Atlantic in a helium balloon
Did you know comedian Steve Martin was also a master illusionist?
In 1991, Mari Huff and some fellow members of the Ghost Research Society were in the Bachelor's Grove Cemetery in Illinois when they captured an eerie image of someone or something sitting on a tombstone.
Jim Reeves was one of the smoothest crooners on the airwaves in the fifties and early sixties. His velvety voice helped establish the Nashville Sound.
Sandinista rebels were on the cusp of taking control of Nicaragua’s capital city, Managua. Bill Stewart was a 37-year-old reporter covering the civil war for ABC.