Researchers believe they've confirmed the identity of a lost early 18th-century Spanish galleon, the San José, through a key discovery: gold escudos minted in Lima in 1707.
The discovery of three unexploded WWII bombs in Cologne, Germany, forced the evacuation of over 20,000 residents on June 4, 2025, marking the city's largest such operation since the end of the war.
The South’s largest remaining pre-Civil War plantation mansion, Nottoway Plantation in White Castle, Louisiana, burned to the ground Thursday — and the response on social media revealed a stark cultural divide. While local officials and historians mourned the loss of a vital piece of American history, left-wing activists online openly celebrated the destruction.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) plans to cease recommending routine COVID-19 vaccinations for pregnant women, teens, and children.
Harvard University has revealed that a document long thought to be a cheap copy of the Magna Carta is, in fact, a rare and authentic 1300 edition issued by King Edward I—one of only seven known to exist.
After the Civil War, abolitionist Julia Ward Howe, writer of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” organized a “Mother's Day for Peace” in New York City on June 2, 1872, to bring healing and reconciliation after the Civil War.
Argentina's Interior Minister, Guillermo Alberto Francos, announced plans to declassify all government-held files related to Nazi fugitives who escaped to Argentina following World War II.