New for December 2025
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Ulysses S. Grant Shares His Thoughts on the Crisis of 1861
During the winter of 1860-1861, as the secession crisis unfolded and the country teetered on the brink of war, private citizen Ulysses S. Grant traveled the upper Midwest, chatting up locals in towns about the future of America. Here's his reflections.
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Before the Lighthouse
The movie explores the formative figures and defining events of Chincoteague during a period of rapid change. Set between the late 18th century and the years just before the construction of the lighthouse, it offers a vivid window into the island’s history.
Little-known fact: Several characters a... -
December 7th (1943)
December 7th (made in 1943) is a striking manifestation of its time, a feature-length docudrama about the bombing of Pearl Harbor that is often at cross purposes with itself in the message it means to convey.
Gregg Toland, the brilliant cinematographer fresh off of Citizen Kane, The Little Foxes ... -
Driving the Oregon Trail in an EV
In the summer of 2022, Mr. Beat took his family on a road trip to Oregon via the Old Oregon Trail. They did their best not to get stranded since they drove it in a Tesla Model Y when not as many chargers existed back then. It's pretty much the ultimate Oregon Trail video.
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I Never Expected to Come Out of the Engagement Alive
During the Army of the Potomac’s 1864 advance across the Rapidan River and deep into enemy territory in Virginia, Union and Confederate forces clashed in The Wilderness—by all accounts some of the fiercest fighting of the war. Here's an eyewitness account by artilleryman Charles B. Brockway.
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Chamberlain at Fredericksburg: "We Buried Them Darkly, at Dead of Night"
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain possessed many natural gifts honed during his life's journey as a professor, general, and governor of Maine. His abilities as a writer shone light on his beloved 20th Maine Infantry and his own leadership at Little Round Top. Here's a lesser known writing about a night...
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Well Done Noble 151st: The Story of Bowen's Independent Rifles
This image of an unidentified soldier showing us his knapsack, stenciled with the name of his organization, and his Sharps rifle kicked off a trip down the research rabbit trail to learn more about his company and regiment. Here's the story.
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Departure of the 69th Volunteers
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1860 US Grant Supports Lincoln, the Wide-Awakes, & Natural Rights of Free People
During the lead up to the election of 1860, Ulysses S. Grant lived in Galena, Ill., where he worked in the family business. Though not able to vote because he had not lived in the state long enough to qualify, he had a preferred candidate—Abraham Lincoln—and he helped drill the Wide-Awakes, a you...
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P-80-Shooting-Star
The Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star marked a turning point in American aviation—the U.S. Army Air Forces’ first operational jet fighter, designed and flown within a staggering 143 days in 1943. But how did it truly compare to its contemporaries, like Germany’s Me 262 and Britain’s Gloster Meteor? And...
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A Memorable Thanksgiving Proclamation for a Country in the Midst of a Civil War
In 1862, The New York Journal of Commerce declared Vermont Gov. Frederick Holbrook’s Thanksgiving message “a proclamation worth reading and preserving.” 163 years later, the governor's words continue to resonate.
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A Scotsman Tramped the South in 1864 & Reflected on Americans at War
John Francis Campbell journeyed far and wide during his lifetime. A scholar, an author, a traveler, and a rambling renaissance man, he traveled to different parts of the globe to see what he could see. This includes a visit to the war-torn United States in the autumn of 1864.
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Bold and Brave as a Lion: Ireland's Michael Emmet Urell
He was an Irish immigrant, Civil and Spanish-American War veteran, color bearer severely wounded in battle, Medal of Honor recipient, baseball player, legislator, and popular figure wherever he went. Meet Michael Emmet Urell of the 82nd New York Infantry.
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A Giant Easter Egg Buried Deep in the CW Records at the National Archives
Buried in the recesses of the National Archives, in the millions of cards in the Compiled Military Service Records (CMSR), is an easter egg in the form of a fantastical giant of a Union soldier from Kentucky. Here's the story—and a guide to understanding CMSRs.
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Speeding Up Your Business - 1922
The location of the story is the Postal Service, at the central sorting station at the foot of Bay Street in Toronto. Conveyors are featured assisting the sorting and movement of mail, with the employees working to the pace of the conveyors. The implication is that this technology might have broa...
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Sympathetic View of Vicksburg's John C. Pemberton
History remembers John Clifford Pemberton as the Northern-born Confederate general who surrendered his forces garrisoning the Mississippi River fortress city of Vicksburg on July 4, 1863. Following his death in Philadelphia in 1881, a local newspaper remembered "the doom of a beaten man was on hi...
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The New-York Volunteer
Like most broadside ballads (lyric sheets) from the American Civil War period, this one was not dated. Found on several versions by at least two different publishers, we can approximate the timing of the publishing of this piece by the content of the lyric, which in this case would be the summer ...