My Father, the Good Nazi
Horst von Wächter confronts - and rationalizes - a difficult family legacy.
Horst von Wächter confronts - and rationalizes - a difficult family legacy.
Philippe Sands The Financial Times May 2013 15min Permalink
On the holy city of Canudos, and other attempts at better living “by the dispossessed and marginalized the world over.”
Jacob Mikanowski The Awl Apr 2013 15min Permalink
In the days following Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination, more than 100 cities experienced significant civil disturbance. In New York, everyone expected riots. What happened next.
Clay Risen The Morning News Jan 2009 10min Permalink
“Dan Seavey stepped ashore the docks of Grand Haven, Michigan, armed with two of the most dangerous weapons known to man: booze and bad intentions.” The story of the early 20th century’s fiercest Great Lakes pirate.
Michael Bie Classic Wisconsin Jan 2009 10min Permalink
An oral history of the day Martin Luther King, Jr. was shot.
Rebecca Burns Atlanta Magazine Apr 2008 35min Permalink
The history and meaning of taxidermy in American museums.
In 1913, Joe Knowles became a media sensation after fleeing into the Maine woods wearing nothing but a jockstrap. Two months and one bear-clubbing incident later, the “Nature Man” returned to civilization as a hero. But was it all hoax?
Bill Donahue Boston Magazine Apr 2013 20min Permalink
How a disgraced Civil War general became one of the best-selling novelists in American history.
John Swansburg Slate Mar 2013 45min Permalink
How the Ovitzs, a family of Jewish dwarves from Transylvania, survived Auschwitz.
Yehuda Koren, Eilat Negev The Guardian Mar 2013 10min Permalink
While being stripped and sold, old ships reflect on their long histories and the generations of men associated with them.
"But we were the ones they came back to, dawn after dawn, year after year. We were the ones who brought them home, hoary and frail, to Snug Harbor. The nurses tucked them into wooden wheelchairs. They spent the landlocked hours making models of us in bottles, the Nellie P. and the Golden Eagle, the Sallie Ann and the Spirit of Victory. Hunched between the wall with the clock and the wall with the crucifix, they assembled us from memory. Their fingers traced each narrow bottleneck. They slipped inside as far as they could reach."
Lynne Beckenstein PANK Magazine Jan 2013 10min Permalink
On historian Ian Morris and his predictions for humanity’s future.
Marc Parry The Chronicle of Higher Education Feb 2013 15min Permalink
On nineteenth century invalidism and how societies have drugged themselves through tough transitions across history.
Venkatesh Rao Ribbonfarm Jan 2013 15min Permalink
On Luddites, “bands of men, organized, masked, anonymous, whose object was to destroy machinery used mostly in the textile industry,” and their literary spawn.
A scholarly dispute devolves into criminal impersonation.
Batya Ungar-Sargon Tablet Jan 2013 10min Permalink
When the East Coast mob showed up in L.A. in 1946, the LAPD formed a ruthess special unit to run them out of town: the Gangster Squad.
Paul Lieberman The Los Angeles Times Oct 2008 30min Permalink
Learning of a plot against the life of the newly elected Lincoln, Alan Pinkerton decamps to Baltimore and infiltrates the conspiracy.
Daniel Stashower Smithsonian Jan 2013 Permalink
On William Cockford and his 1800s gambling hall in London, where much of the British aristocracy lost its fortune.
Mike Dash Smithsonian Nov 2012 Permalink
How Human Potential Movement workshops permeated our lives and our businesses.
Suzanne Snider The Believer May 2003 25min Permalink
Richard Gere, AIDS anxiety and the search for the “Original Gerbil.”
The revolutionary and the silver screen.
Mike Dash Smithsonian Nov 2012 Permalink
Efraim Zuroff does not want to retire.
Joshua Davidovich The Times of Israel Nov 2012 15min Permalink
How modernity – and an eruption of violence – changed “the most remote inhabited island on the Atlantic seaboard.”
Geoffrey Douglas Yankee Sep 2011 Permalink
Two nineteenth century paleontologists, once friends and colleagues, become bitter enemies.
"But years ago, there was room for friendship. They talked for hours at Haddonfield, grinning in helpless academic passion and exclaiming at their own twin hearts. They ate breakfast together on a heap of rock in the marl pits, black bread and coffee as the sun swam into the sky. Cope in shirtsleeves, a boy's face, looking more like Marsh's son than his contemporary."
Amber Sparks The Collagist Jan 2012 10min Permalink
How the Oglala Lakota healed from a massacre.
Alexandra Fuller National Geographic Aug 2012 15min Permalink
On Enrique of Malacca, “the closest thing there is to a hero in the story of Ferdinand Magellan’s horribly botched attempt to circumnavigate the world.”
Josh Fruhlinger The Awl Jul 2012 10min Permalink