January 25 – The Day the American Revolution Almost Had a Sequel
On January 25, 1787, Shays’ Rebellion came to a violent end when armed farmers clashed with militia outside the Springfield Armory. In this episode of The Strange History …
On January 25, 1787, Shays’ Rebellion came to a violent end when armed farmers clashed with militia outside the Springfield Armory. In this episode of The Strange History …
On January 24, 1848, gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill in California, triggering the events that would become the Gold Rush. In this episode of The Strange History …
January 23 is associated with centuries of strange reports involving objects falling from clear skies — from fish and frogs to massive unexplained blocks of ice. In this …
During the 1915 Gallipoli Campaign of World War I, an entire British regiment was witnessed marching into a strange, stationary cloud—and never emerged. Observed by multiple Allied units …
On January 22, 1896, experiments involving light and metal revealed behavior that classical physics could not explain, quietly laying the groundwork for quantum theory. In this episode of …
On January 21, 1954, the USS Nautilus became the world’s first nuclear-powered submarine, allowing humans to remain underwater longer than ever before. In this episode of The Strange …
January 20 is known in European folklore as Saint Agnes’ Eve, a night believed to reveal the future through dreams, silence, and strange rituals involving shoes, fasting, and …
On January 19, 1915, German Zeppelin airships carried out the first aerial bombardment of civilians in Britain, silently drifting over sleeping towns and changing warfare forever. In this …
Deep in the remote wilderness of Siberia lies a massive stone roadway built from enormous fitted slabs—stretching across terrain where no known civilization was ever meant to exist. …
On January 18, 1778, Captain James Cook became the first European to record contact with the Hawaiian Islands, placing them onto global maps for the first time. In …
On January 17, 1997, a rocket carrying a GPS satellite exploded just 13 seconds after liftoff at Cape Canaveral. In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, Amy …
On January 17, 1773, Captain James Cook and his crew became the first humans to cross the Antarctic Circle, sailing into a region no one had ever explored. …
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