Main Page

From DailyHistory.org
Revision as of 07:09, 31 May 2016 by Admin (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search


Shantytown USA.jpg

Shantytown, USA: Interview with Lisa Goff

The Harvard University Press recently published Lisa Goff's new book Shantytown, USA: Forgotten Landscapes of the Working Poor. There's a chance that one of your American ancestors lived in an American shantytown. While we may not realize it now, shantytowns were a common feature of 19th century America. Goff's book explores not only how shantytowns became a prominent feature of America's towns and cities, but why middle class Americans eventually turned on them and their residents. {{Read more|Shantytown, USA: Interview with Lisa Goff}

1905footballteamyale.png

Did Theodore Roosevelt really save Football?

The headline at the top of the right hand column in The Chicago Sunday Tribune on November 26, 1905 screamed, "Football Year's Death Harvest - Record Shows That Nineteen Players Have Been Killed; One Hundred Thirty-seven Hurt - Two Are Slain Saturday." [1] Contemporary numbers differ on the exact number of football fatalities suffered on the playing field in 1905, but young men were dying playing football. Read more...

Hodges scout.jpg

Hodges' Scout: Interview with Len Travers

Johns Hopkins University Press has recently published Len Traver's new book Hodges' Scout: A Lost Patrol of the French and Indian War. Travers' book examines a group of colonial scouts who were ambushed on a patrol in upstate New York by French and Native American soldiers during the French and Indian War. Travers uses this massacre to explore the lives of the colonists who fought, died and even survived this massacre. Read more...

Bogiecagneyroaring.jpg

The Hays Code, Gangsters, and Prohibition: How did 1934 change Hollywood?

1934 was a pivotal year for the United States. Americans were enduring the fifth year of the Great Depression and the rural population was in an extreme state of suffering that had begun prior to the stock market crash in October 1929. Urban citizens fared little better, yet those who had a nickel to spare spent it at the moves. Read more...

Bundesarchiv Bild 183-S62600, Adolf Hitler.jpg

The Nazi triumph: how did Adolf Hitler become the Fuehrer of Germany?

With the death of German President Paul von Hindenburg, Chancellor Adolf Hitler became absolute dictator of Germany under the title Fuehrer or “Leader”. The German army took an oath of allegiance to its new commander-in-chief, and the last remnants of Germany’s democratic government were dismantled to make way for Hitler’s Third Reich. The Fuehrer assured his people that the Third Reich would last for at least thousand years. However, Nazi Germany collapsed just 11 years later. Read more...

1200px-Planispherical astrolabe mg 7100 (1).jpg

How did Navigation Develop in the Ancient World?

Navigation played a critical role not just in trade but also in warfare and the spreading of ideas, diseases, migrations, and even technologies that accelerated cultural change. Navigation increasingly made movement by sea easier over time; however, much of this knowledge that facilitated movement was accumulated knowledge that took many centuries or even millennia to develop. Read more...

Wc0107-04780r.jpg

How did Winston Churchill become Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in World War Two?

Winston Churchill led a remarkable life, but perhaps the most remarkable element in his life was how he became prime minister in 1940. Just a few years earlier he was widely seen as politically isolated and was widely ridiculed for his views. Yet in 1940, he was appointed his nation’s Prime Minister at its darkest hours and became the leader of the fight against Nazi Germany. Read more...

Picacho Peak.jpeg

What Was the Significance of the Southwest in the Outcome of the Civil War

In 1862, General Sibley of the Confederate States of America (CSA) Army marched his brigade from Texas, along the Rio Grande, and was destined for California. Colonel Carleton, commander of the Union's California Column, led his troops eastward from Fort Yuma with the mission of preventing the Sibley Brigade from reaching California. The leaders in Washington, D.C. and Richmond both understood the importance of possessing New Mexico and Arizona territories as they were the gateway to the ports of California. Read more...

Mao Nixon.jpeg

Why did the United States and Soviet Union Reach Detente During the Cold War?

Detente was a period lasting approximately from 1972 to 1981 in which there was a thaw in relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. It was punctuated by major and surprising events, including the end of American involvement in the Vietnam War, a large economic downturn in the West, and the opening of relations with China. Read more...

Contribute

DailyHistory.org is a communitiy history wiki. Almost every page (excluding interviews and expert booklists) can be edited. You are welcome to join us.

  • Every article answers a historical question and every booklist is a Top ten list.
  • After you register, you will be able to edit and create articles.
  • All of your contributions need to be original.
  • If you want to create a new page, you can easily do so by using the following form:

Categories

Below you can find the category structure of the wiki, as well as the pages within each category.

History(96 C, 1 P)
18th Century History(29 P)
19th Century History(3 C, 119 P)
20th Century History(5 C, 165 P)
African History(9 P)
Ancient History(11 C, 167 P)
Archeology(13 P)
Art history(empty)
Asian History(3 C, 24 P)
Biblical History(5 P)
Biography(1 C)
Borderlands History(1 P)
British History(3 C, 63 P)
Business History(1 P)
Byzantine History(8 P)
Canadian History(1 P)
Chinese History(18 P)
CIA(1 P)
Costume History(2 P)
Cultural History(5 P)
Decorative Arts(1 C, 4 P)
Deep Impact History(2 P)
Diplomatic History(115 P)
Documentaries(empty)
Dutch History(1 P)
Economic History(36 P)
Ethnic History(1 P)
European History(13 C, 131 P)
Fact or Fiction(2 P)
Feminist History(4 P)
Film History(1 C, 10 P)
Food History(14 P)
Gender History(2 C, 3 P)
Genocide(4 P)
Great Depression(7 P)
Historical Documents(2 C, 103 P)
Historical Fiction(1 P)
Historical Movies(empty)
Historical Television(empty)
Historiography(1 C, 42 P)
History of Animals(1 P)
History of Magic(1 P)
History of Music(1 P)
History of Sex(3 P)
History of Slavery(2 P)
Holiday History(11 P)
Immigration History(3 P)
Imperialism(1 P)
Indian History(12 P)
Iranian History(4 P)
Irish History(6 P)
Labor History(3 P)
Legal History(21 P)
Leisure History(1 P)
LGBT History(1 P)
Linguistic History(1 P)
Media History(4 P)
Medical History(40 P)
Mexican History(6 P)
Middle Ages History(1 P)
Middle East History(10 P)
Military History(5 C, 107 P)
Multiculturalism(2 P)
Music History(3 P)
Myths and Gods(2 C, 27 P)
Near East History(20 P)
Ottoman History(3 P)
Philosophy(1 C, 7 P)
Political History(1 C, 144 P)
Race and Ethnicity(3 P)
Radicalism(1 P)
Religious History(3 C, 67 P)
Social History(6 P)
South American History(1 C, 3 P)
Sports History(13 P)
Subaltern Studies(1 P)
United States History(20 C, 330 P)
Urban History(7 P)
World History(3 P)

Please like Dailyhistory.org's Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Tumblr and Google+ pages or follow us on our DailyHistory.org blog.