PODCAST · history
The HistoryNet Podcast
by HistoryNet.com
The HistoryNet Podcast features some of the greatest stories from HistoryNet.com's archive of over 25,000+ features. From ancient Rome to the Middle Ages, from the 18th century to the edge of recent memory, we zero in on the people and events that made the world what it is today. Vividly written by expert authors, thoroughly edited and fact-checked by magazine professionals, these stories bring history to vibrant life.The narrators of this podcast, however, are not human beings but AI voices created by our partner, Instaread.co. Say what you will about AI, but in this case the voices are surprisingly real, capturing well the nuances of the articles they're reading aloud.To read those stories in their original form, please go to historynet.com.For advertising inquires, please contact <a href="mailto:advert
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Nobody wanted the A-10 Warthog — now It's the military's most beloved plane
The A-10 Warthog has survived repeated attempts to put it out to pasture. Now its time may finally be up.
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105
They were sent on a suicide mission at Cedar Creek. Their victory rallied the Union.
The fierce clash proved to be a fitting coda for the resolute 8th Vermont.
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104
They say he burned down the Reichstag. But was he drugged into confessing?
Mystery surrounds the infamous burning of the Reichstag in 1933.
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103
Kars fortress stands as a monument to a turbulent past
For centuries Armenian residents of the Transcaucasian stronghold of Kars watched invaders come and go—until its final betrayal.
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102
This journalist risked his life to reveal the horrors of lynching in the South
Lynching investigator Walter White risked everything to tell Americans the truth.
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101
John Fetterman isn't the first ill politician to serve. Here are examples from history
From the Founding Fathers to the present day, illness has impacted politics.
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100
The death of Crazy Horse: Fables and forensics
Just who killed the Lakota fighting man remains in dispute.
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99
The Ercoupe is easy to fly — but you better not be in a hurry
It was supposed to be an airplane for the people.
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98
These Civil War warriors fought with the pen, and not the sword
Partisan poets stoked the fire to keep the South’s combat spirit alive.
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97
The mysterious death of Johnny Ringo
The gunman’s body was found beneath a tree, pistol in hand—but was it suicide?
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96
Minié ball: The Civil War bullet that changed history
What's a Minié ball, and why was this type of bullet—which is actually conical—used extensively during the American Civil War?
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95
What if the Marines had skipped Iwo Jima
What would have happened if the U.S. hadn't sent men to take this small atoll, site of that iconic photo? Would it have cost the war?
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94
This German baroness dodged cannonballs during the American Revolution
Hessian officer's wife Frederika von Riedesel and her children were nearly shot during the battle of Saratoga.
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93
'Weary of So Much Suffering': Letters from the Sheridan Field Hospital
Nurse Jane Boswell Moore wrote poignant letters about her interactions with the patients of this Winchester, Va., hospital.
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92
'Medicine Flower' Brought the West East
Ethnologist Frank Cushing embraced Zuni culture right down to his Indian name.
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91
Kidnapped during World War II, these German corpses proved a headache for the U.S. Army
Four dead Germans traveled on a wild journey, resulting in what the Monuments Men called "Operation Bodysnatch".
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90
This Supreme Court ruling on prayer in public schools made America go nuts
On June 25, 1962, the U.S. Supreme Court declared prayer in public schools unconstitutional.
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89
Robert E. Lee endured a precipitous reset in Maryland
Though the Lost Orders forced the Confederate commander to fight on unfavorable ground at Sharpsburg, he survived the bloody clash with his army intact.
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88
Meet the man who sent the world's largest flying machine to its doom
Christopher Birdwood Thomson was determined to fly the R101 airship to India, whether it was ready for the trip or not.
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87
One of this Western director's scenes looked so real that it provoked actual gunfire
In 1902, Harry Buckwalter teamed with William Selig to make short-reel Westerns.
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86
Zap! American railroads go electric
After 70 years of steam and smoke, American rail began to plug in.
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85
Joe Hooker was an ineffectual general, but does he deserve credit for transforming the Union cavalry?
Hooker had his shortcomings, but what he did in revitalizing his army’s cavalry corps was monumental.
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84
Napoleon's imperial guard tells of his fight for the emperor
An infantry captain who served in Napoleon's elite troops tells of the army's quest for glory.
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83
Sharpshooter Billy Dixon owes his legacy to his widow
Olive Dixon spent 40 years making sure Texans would always remember her heroic husband.
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82
This German general made a deal with the devil
German General Ludwig Beck supported the Nazis—until he didn’t. He paid with his life.
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81
WWI American pilots wanted a great fighter plane. Instead, they got the Nieuport 28
The Americans flying in World War I wanted the Spad XIII. They got the Nieuport 28 instead.
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80
One family, 10 sieges: How Spain's Guzman family spent centuries battling for Gibraltar
The Guzman family’s quest to dominate the Rock of Gibraltar gives the phrase “family feud” a whole new meaning.
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79
The Turkestan Incident
How two F-105 pilots and their commander got entangled in the geopolitics of the Vietnam War.
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78
The Arikara War: avenging Americans
Entrepreneur William Ashley’s attempt to trade for Arikara horses led to a ‘beach’ battle that inflicted 30 percent casualties on his brigade and inspired an outraged Colonel Henry Leavenworth to punish the Missouri River tribe.
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77
No, the London Blitz wasn't started by accident
It is becoming commonly accepted that the German night bombing of London on Aug. 24, 1940 was due to a “blunder” of Luftwaffe pilots.
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76
When is a Mustang not a Mustang?
Australia’s CA-15 was one of the world’s fastest piston-engine fighters, but it was obsolete by the time it first flew.
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75
White Oaks, New Mexico: the onetime haunt of Billy the Kid
The New Mexico Territory town had a violent beginning, as Billy the Kid and other outlaws came here to sell stolen livestock, drink, shoot and otherwise blow off steam.
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74
When a Vietnamese ally was wounded, two American soldiers had to choose obedience or compassion
There was a time when U.S. helicopters were forbidden from rescuing wounded South Vietnamese soldiers.
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73
Nobody could scale the walls of China's Forbidden City except this American soldier
A young American bugler turned the tide in China’s 1900 Boxer Rebellion.
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72
This British officer developed a revolutionary rifle whose worth he was never able to prove in battle
Major Patrick Ferguson earned his nickname for his dogged determination to remain in the American Revolutionary War and bring the upstart Patriots to heel.
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71
The last surviving widow of the Civil War
A Missouri woman sacrificed much of her own life to help an aged Union veteran.
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70
The old world soldier who conquered the new
In 1519 Hernán Cortés set out to invade the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán, his boldness earning Spain a foothold in the Americas.
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69
The Boeing 377 Stratocruiser was a great airplane until the propellers started falling off
Pan American World Airways wanted something special. Boeing responded with the 377.
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68
The balloon pilots who went boldly where only animals had gone before
Project Manhigh took pilots to the edge of space.
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67
Lewis and Clark's race against Spain
Thomas Jefferson had his eyes on Louisiana, and so did Spain.
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66
The assassination of Ngo Dinh Diem
Did the bloody downfall of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem put the United States on a slippery slope into a quagmire?
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65
This 1945 New Guinea plane crash survivor became known as the Queen of Shangri-La
In 1945 Women’s Army Corps Cpl. Margaret Hastings went down aboard a C-47 in a remote New Guinea valley, launching an improbable story of survival.
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64
The bomber that almost wasn't
WWII's Convair B-32 Dominator never got the chance to live up to its name.
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63
Mexican War: The proving ground for future American Civil War generals
For young American army officers of the time, the Mexican War was not only the road to glory, it was the road to promotion — a proving ground for future Civil War generals.
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62
Most POWs want to go home — but after World War II, some faced death on arrival
After WWII, questions rose about which nation POWs belonged to or even whether they would be killed upon going home.
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61
Patsy Cline's final flight
What the fatal airplane crash of the country star says about flying then and now.
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60
One week before this pioneering aviator's tragic death, an American watched him work
German inventor Otto Lilienthal had flown more than 2,000 times before his glider failed him.
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59
The man behind Monty
Bernard Law Montgomery's chief of staff, Sir Francis de Guingand, made things easier for a difficult general.
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58
Marilyn Monroe's Death: Early victim of the opioid epidemic
Once a Hollywood scourge, opioid overdoses are now an everyday plague across America. She was one of its most famous victims.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
The HistoryNet Podcast features some of the greatest stories from HistoryNet.com's archive of over 25,000+ features. From ancient Rome to the Middle Ages, from the 18th century to the edge of recent memory, we zero in on the people and events that made the world what it is today. Vividly written by expert authors, thoroughly edited and fact-checked by magazine professionals, these stories bring history to vibrant life.The narrators of this podcast, however, are not human beings but AI voices created by our partner, Instaread.co. Say what you will about AI, but in this case the voices are surprisingly real, capturing well the nuances of the articles they're reading aloud.To read those stories in their original form, please go to historynet.com.For advertising inquires, please contact <a href="mailto:advert
HOSTED BY
HistoryNet.com
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