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In 1926, Arctic explorer Peter Freuchen was trapped under an avalanche while on an expedition. He escaped from death by fashioning a shiv out of his own feces and amputating his foot.
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In ancient Egypt, servants were smeared with honey to attract flies away from the pharaoh.
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Roman Catholics in Bavaria founded a secret society in 1740 called the Order of the Pug. New members had to wear dog collars and scratch at the door to get in.
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The first fax was sent while people were still traveling the Oregon Trail.
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In the Victorian era, it was popular for people to photograph relatives after they had died, often placing them in lifelike poses.
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In 1923, jockey Frank Hayes won a race at Belmont Park in New York despite being dead. He suffered a heart attack mid-race, but his body stayed in the saddle until his horse crossed the line for a 20-1 outsider victory.
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All British tanks since 1945 have included equipment to make tea.
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Hitler, Mussolini, and Stalin were all nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.
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Tsutomu Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima when the first atom bomb was dropped. He then traveled home to Nagasaki the day before the second atom bomb was dropped. He survived both and lived to be 93.
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Roman Emperor Gaius, also known as Caligula, made one of his favorite horses a senator.
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The town of Salem, New Jersey once held a trial against tomatoes in 1820 because of the widespread belief they were poisonous. The case ended after Colonel Robert Gibbon Johnson ate a basket of tomatoes without ill consequence.
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Potatoes were only introduced to Ireland in the late 1500s after being discovered by Spanish Conquistadors in Peru.
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In 1942, the U.S. Army fired 1,400 anti-aircraft rounds during what was thought to be a Japanese air raid over Los Angeles County. It turned out to be a false alarm. Five civilians died as an indirect result.
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In 1493, Columbus thought he saw mermaids — they were “not as pretty as they are depicted, for somehow in the face they look like men.” It’s suspected he saw a manatee.
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At the height of his popularity, Charlie Chaplin entered a Charlie Chaplin look-a-like competition in San Francisco. He came in 20th place.
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Chickens may have been first domesticated by humans for cockfighting, not for food.
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History’s shortest war was between England and Zanzibar. It lasted only 38 minutes.
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During the 1800s in the United States, it was considered a cruel and unusual punishment to feed lobster to prisoners and convicts.
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Thomas Edison once electrocuted a circus elephant to death on Coney Island. Over a thousand people came to watch her die while Edison recorded it on video.
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Before the 19th century, dentures were commonly made with teeth pulled from the mouths of dead soldiers.
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In 1998, 1,200 bones from some ten human bodies were found in the basement of Ben Franklin’s house. The bodies were used in the study of human anatomy, scholars believe.
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During the middle ages, it was believed that sperm produced from the left testicle produced girls. To ensure having a son, men would have it removed.
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Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died hours apart on the same day, July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of American independence.
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President William Henry Harrison served the shortest term in U.S. history. He died of a cold just two months into his presidency. Doctors have him traditional treatments like leeches, opium, and snakeweed, which contributed to his death.
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In 1929, researchers at Princeton University turned a living cat into a telephone.
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The name “Nazi” was taken from pre-existing slang for a backward peasant. The term was popularized by Hitler’s opponents and was rarely used by Nazis themselves.
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One of history’s longest wars likely lasted for 335 years and was between the Netherlands and the Isles of Sicily. Not a single person was killed.
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Romans used urine as mouthwash. Urine contains ammonia, which is one of the best natural cleaning agents on the planet.
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The current 50 star U.S. flag was designed by 17-year-old Robert Heft for a school project. He received a B-.
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A passenger who lived through the traumatic fire and sinking of a ship in 1871 faced his fears and boarded the Titanic in 1912. He sank with the ship.
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In 1838, Edgar Allan Poe wrote The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, a book about four crewmen on a whaling ship who ended up stranded and having to draw lots to see who would be eaten. The lot landed on a cabin boy named Richard Parker. Forty-six years later, a yacht named Mignonette bound for Sydney, Australia capsized en route from London. The three crewmen then killed and ate their cabin boy named Richard Parker.
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A would-be assassin threw a grenade at George W. Bush in 2005, but it didn’t explode.
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People were buried alive so often in the 19th century that a safety coffin was invented so the “dead” would have the ability to alert those above ground if they were still alive.
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Civil War soldiers on both sides were offered bounties upon enlistment, causing some men to enlist and escape again and again in order to collect multiple bounties. One man collected 32 before he was finally caught.
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Lord Byron kept a pet bear in his dorm room while studying at Cambridge University.
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