THE STONEWALL UPRISING

                Post-WWII was not a good time to be gay in America.  The American Psychiatric Association had labeled homosexuality a “mental disorder”.  The FBI maintained a list of known homosexuals because it was felt they would be liable for extortion by communists.  Most gay men and women were “in the Read more…

THE BERLIN CANDY BOMBER

                Gail Halverson grew up on a farm.  But as he did chores, he would sometimes look up to see planes and vowed to one day be a pilot.  When WWII broke out, Halverson enlisted and joined the Army Air Corps.  He spent the war ferrying transport planes to England, Read more…

THE FIRST “TRIAL OF THE CENTURY”

                Stanford White was the most famous architect in New York City during the Gilded Age.  His architectural firm had designed buildings for J.P. Morgan and Cornelius Vanderbilt and other rich families.  From 1879 on, the firm designed 900 hotels, private clubs, libraries, museums, universities, and churches.  A tower that Read more…

THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS

                In 207 B.C., Hannibal had been dominating Italy for 11 years.  He had defeated every Roman army that faced him.  By this time, the Romans were avoiding battle and just trying to contain him.  It was obvious that he could not take Rome, but they could not take him.  Read more…

THE YOUNGEST ELECTRIC CHAIR VICTIM

                On March 22, 1944, two white girls disappeared while bicycle riding looking for flowers.  The bodies of 11-year-old Betty Binnicker and 7-year-old Mary Thames were found in a ditch the next day.  They had been brutally beaten by a blunt object.  14-year-old George Stinney, Jr. had spoken to the Read more…