Tag: weird US history
Thursday’s Photo Caption Contest
The results are in! Our guest judge Tim Walch, director of the Hoover Presidential Library in Iowa, decided that Shannon’s caption takes the prize. “This a wonderful, unexpected, quirky caption-and a great plug for a funny film. Also, we don’t think about Rosemary Clooney enough these days!” he said. Congratulations, Shannon, you’ve won 30% off at the National Archives eStore! [...]
Posted by Rob Crotty on October 7, 2010, under Photo Caption Contest.
Tags: american history, caption contest, free games, Hoover Presidential Library, NARA, national archives, odd history, Pieces of History, prologue blog, random history, weird US history
Comments: 8
The orphan called Tokyo Rose
The story of Tokyo Rose is the stuff of legends—an English-speaking Japanese woman who seduced the airwaves of the South Pacific with tales of Japanese success, Allied failures, and honest encouragement to give up the fight and return home. The trouble is, there never was a Tokyo Rose, the name was a GI term used [...]
Posted by Rob Crotty on October 6, 2010, under - Civil Rights, - World War II, Myth or History.
Tags: american history, NARA, national archives, National archives and records administration, odd history, Pieces of History, prologue blog, Prologue magazine, random history, weird US history
Comments: 2
Beer = mc2
In 1885, Munich’s Oktoberfest was celebrated under the glow of the electric light for the first time. Who was responsible for that feat? None other than Albert Einstein himself. Granted, it may have been his father and uncle who are truly due the credit (Albert was a teetotaling six-year-old at the time), but the math [...]
Posted by Rob Crotty on October 5, 2010, under Myth or History.
Tags: albert einstein, american history, childhood, documerica, einstein and beer, einstein immigration, electricity, light, munich, NARA, national archives, National archives and records administration, new ulm, odd history, oktoberfest, Pieces of History, prologue blog, Prologue magazine, random history, ulm, weird US history
Comments: none
The price of freedom? About a $1.05
They say you can’t put a price on freedom, but you can put a price on savings bonds! Watch this compilation of famous celebrities plugging savings and stamp bonds, from Mr. Ed and Lassie all the way to the Duke and Bugs Bunny.
Posted by Rob Crotty on October 4, 2010, under Rare Videos.
Tags: american history, NARA, national archives, National archives and records administration, odd history, Pieces of History, prologue blog, Prologue magazine, random history, weird US history
Comments: none
Before there was broadband, there was a beard
Long before the push to make high-speed Internet available across America, Samuel Morse was tap-tap-tapping information across America. By 1838, his telegraph machine was using a dot-and-dash system to send messages of up to 10 words a minute. He even convinced Congress to come to up with $30,000 to help him wire America. Morse was [...]
Posted by Hilary on October 1, 2010, under Facial Hair Fridays.
Tags: american history, civil war, General Sherman, lincoln, Morse, NARA, national archives, National archives and records administration, odd history, Pieces of History, prologue blog, Prologue magazine, random history, Savannah, telegraph, texting, Twitter, weird US history
Comments: 1
