Hitler at Home
How the “genial Bavarian” version of Adolf Hitler became a global media celebrity, “a plain-living gentleman with a soft spot for dogs and children.”
How the “genial Bavarian” version of Adolf Hitler became a global media celebrity, “a plain-living gentleman with a soft spot for dogs and children.”
Despina Stratigakos Places Journal Sep 2015 35min Permalink
A treasure hunter found the world’s richest shipwreck off the coast of Cape Cod. Or at least that’s what he told his investors.
Erick Trickey Boston Magazine Sep 2015 25min Permalink
The story of “Madam Walker,” who built a thriving empire of hair products for black women.
Hunter Oatman-Stanford Collector's Weekly Aug 2015 15min Permalink
Visiting the treasures – bear skulls, footprints, an ancient emerald necklace – that surfaced with shipwrecks at Yenikapi in Turkey.
Elif Batuman New Yorker Aug 2015 25min Permalink
Two summers spent teaching and living in the hills of Tennessee.
W.E.B. Du Bois The Atlantic Jan 1899 15min Permalink
The mysterious life of the serial stowaway Marilyn Hartman.
Joe Eskenazi San Francisco Jul 2015 15min Permalink
Business History Politics Tech
If jobs as we’ve known them for a century are going away, what will replace them?
Derek Thompson The Atlantic Jul 2015 35min Permalink
Kevin Wheatcroft owns the world’s largest collection of Nazi memorabilia. And he’s suddenly eager to show it off.
Alex Preston The Guardian Jun 2015 20min Permalink
An oral history with former employees Sasha Frere-Jones, Alysia Abbott, Piotr Orlov, and Chris Wilcha.
Annie Zaleski AV Club Jun 2015 35min Permalink
Madeleine Fullard is on a mission to locate the remains of apartheid’s murdered activists. She needs the help of Eugene de Kock, a former police squad leader known as “Prime Evil,” to do so.
Justine van der Leun The Guardian Jun 2015 30min Permalink
The story of Ota Benga, captured in the Congo, displayed at the World’s Fair, and brought to the Bronx Zoo in 1906.
Pamela Newkirk The Guardian Jun 2015 25min Permalink
Dave Wilsey was among the American soldiers who liberated Dachau. The letters he left behind complicate the story.
Steve Friess The New Republic May 2015 15min Permalink
The 1826 kidnapping – and murder – that begat America’s obsession with Masons.
Andrew Burt Slate May 2015 20min Permalink
Decades after a young nun was murdered, a group of former Catholic high school students begin to suspect that an abusive priest may have been the culprit.
Laura Bassett Huffington Post May 2015 30min Permalink
Revisiting the 6200 block of Osage Avenue.
Gene Demby NPR May 2015 15min Permalink
An essay on its history and future during a time when “gayness, we are told, is over.”
J. Bryan Lowder Slate May 2015 35min Permalink
Gregg Bemis is an 87-year-old retired venture capitalist who owns the salvage rights to the Lusitania. He’s determined to prove an alternate theory as to why the ship was attacked in 1915. Unfortunately, the Irish government isn’t so into his plan.
Richard B. Stolley Fortune May 2015 15min Permalink
The man who killed John Wilkes Booth was a eunuch. By choice.
Bill Jensen Washingtonian Apr 2015 15min Permalink
What led to the 1970 explosion of a Greenwich Village townhouse, in which three members of the Weather Underground were killed, and what happened to the group after.
Excerpted from Days of Rage.
Bryan Burrough Vanity Fair Mar 2015 30min Permalink
What happend to Serafim Todorov after the 1996 Olympic featherweight semifinals.
Sam Borden New York Times Apr 2015 10min Permalink
The rise of the Peoples Temple through the lens of an earlier group: Father Divine’s Peace Mission.
Adam Morris The Believer Apr 2015 25min Permalink
An innocent man was executed – in 1761. Voltaire got on the case.
Ken Armstrong The Marshall Project Mar 2015 15min Permalink
The East India Company was once “too big to fail.”
William Dalrymple The Guardian Mar 2015 25min Permalink
A segregated housing development washed away in a flood can still explain why Portland, Oregon, is such a “white” city.
Natasha Geiling Smithsonian Feb 2015 Permalink
President Lincoln worked very hard all his life. After he died, his corpse kept a gruelling travel schedule, too.
Richard Wightman Fox Slate Feb 2015 10min Permalink