With a 20-year run and 635 episodes, it stands as America's longest-running, prime time, live-action drama.
It was a moth that had wedged itself into the machine's relays.
The mission was to drop two incendiary bombs on Wheeler Peak in hopes of igniting a massive forest fire.
Evel Kenievel tried to jump Idaho's Snake River Canyon in a steam-powered rocket.
Sometimes called Tasmanian Tigers, these odd critters were one of the largest carnivorous marsupials.
President McKinley had given away his lucky charm, a red carnation, to a little girl who asked for the souvenir.
Feeling betrayed, his last words were, “Let me go my friends. You have got me hurt enough.”
It was big day for party poopers.
The SS Princess Alice, a fully-loaded passenger steamship, collided with the Bywell Castle, a cargo ship hauling coal.
Eastman’s criteria for a name were that it had to be “short and euphonious and likely to stick in the public’s mind.”
Martha, the last of the passenger pigeons was found dead on this day in her enclosure at the Cincinnati Zoo.
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.
In 1835 the New York Sun published the first of six articles detailing the amazing discovery of life on the moon.