NewsInHistory Blog

Editorial after Richmond Falls Questions Southern Spirit

On April 3, 1865, after a ten-month siege that caused tens of thousands of casualties, the Union army captured the Confederate capital city of Richmond, Virginia. The stalemate had been long and costly, but Union General Ulysses S. Grant—leader of the massive Army of the Potomac—could afford his losses much more easily than Confederate General Robert E. Lee, whose surrounded and haggard Army of Northern Virginia was decimated by disease, hunger, casualties, and desertion—and had no hopes of receiving reinforcements. read more...

Confederate Capital of Richmond Captured

In April of 1865 the Civil War was finally drawing to a close after four years of devastating fighting. One major, and elusive, prize remained for the Union: the capture of the Confederate capital at Richmond, Virginia. For nearly ten months Richmond and the nearby city of Petersburg had been defended by the South’s main army, the Army of Northern Virginia, led by General Robert E. Lee. The force besieging the Confederate capital was the massive Union Army of the Potomac, led by General Ulysses S. Grant, and it dwarfed the Southern army in every way: men, arms, equipment, and supplies. read more...

President Wilson Asks Congress to Declare War on Germany

By the spring of 1917, World War I had been raging for nearly three years. In the trenches of Europe and on battlegrounds in Africa and the Middle East, nations were tearing themselves apart and sacrificing millions of their young men. Anxiously pacing on the sidelines of this great conflict and keeping a wary eye on the growing carnage was America, doggedly pursuing a strained policy of neutrality. read more...

Suicide Part of the Terror of the Battle of Okinawa

The Battle of Okinawa, an 82-day clash that was the deadliest campaign of WWII’s Pacific Theater, began on April 1, 1945. With nearly 300,000 American and Japanese troops involved, and thousands of American, British and Japanese warships and airplanes, massive firepower was employed during this bloody battle. When it ended on June 22, nearly every Japanese defender—more than 100,000 troops—had been killed, while the Allies suffered over 60,000 casualties. In addition, the local Okinawans suffered anywhere from 40,000 to 150,000 casualties. read more...

Pivotal WWII Battle of Okinawa Begins

In the spring of 1945 the Japanese empire was crumbling, and Allied commanders were thinking about the upcoming invasion of the Japanese homeland. One key objective was left, however: Okinawa, largest of the Ryukyu Islands, only 340 miles from the homeland. It was heavily defended by more than 100,000 determined and well-fortified Japanese troops, but it was a prize the Allies had to have: control of Okinawa would provide airfields close to Japan, anchorage for Allied warships, and staging areas for the massive number of troops needed for the invasion of Japan. read more...

March Addition: NewsInHistory Adds More Newspapers!

NewsInHistory is continually adding more content to our historical newspapers archive—titles new to our collection as well as expanding the date ranges and number of issues for titles already in our archive. This current addition involves 11 newspapers from 6 states and the District of Columbia. A total of 5,542 issues have been added in this release! Here are the details:

California

Evening Tribune (San Diego). 76 issues: 1896 to 1922

District of Columbia read more...

Helter-Skelter: Death Penalty for Charles Manson and Followers

Some people think August 1969 was the apotheosis of the ’60s counterculture, when the Woodstock Festival was held in New York from Aug. 15-17. Billed as “3 Days of Peace & Music,” as many as 500,000 young people, many long-haired, most doing drugs, and all coming together to be part of a “happening” greater than their individual selves, showed the world that America’s next generation embraced cooperation over competition, peace over war, and togetherness over isolation—all wrapped up in the electronic, sensational music of the times. read more...

Lt. Calley Convicted of Murder for My Lai Massacre

On the morning of March 16, 1968, American troops went on a search and destroy mission into some tiny hamlets in South Vietnam, killing everything in sight—animals as well as human beings. The exact death toll will never be known, but estimates of the My Lai Massacre range from 347 to 504 innocent villagers slaughtered, most of them women, young children and babies. No Viet Cong were found, and at no time were the American troops subjected to enemy fire. It was, plain and simple, a massacre. read more...

Jim Thorpe Dies: Sad End for an Amazing Athlete

When asked to name the greatest athletes in U.S. history, most Americans readily identify Babe Ruth and Michael Jordan. However, another name should always be added to that list: Jim Thorpe, arguably the best American athlete of all time. Thorpe’s life was an incredible mixture of triumph and tragedy and reads like a Hollywood script. In fact, Warner Brothers did make a movie of his life, the 1951 box-office smash Jim Thorpe, All American, starring Burt Lancaster. Being Hollywood, the movie has a happy ending. read more...

‘Bibles and Rifles’ to End Slavery in Kansas Territory

When the clash over slavery between North and South erupted into the bloodshed of the U.S. Civil War, its violence mirrored what had been going on in the Kansas Territory the preceding decade. “Bleeding Kansas” was ravaged in the 1850s by deadly attacks from both pro- and anti-slavery forces, fighting each other to determine whether the territory would enter the Union as a slave or free state. John Brown, whose raid on the U.S. read more...