It remains a mystery, one that perhaps may never be solved. This much is clear: early in the morning of March 18, 1990, two thieves dressed as Boston police officers tricked the pair of security guards at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum into granting them entry. Once inside, they bound and gagged the guards and stole 13 immensely valuable works of art, worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The thieves have never been caught, and the stolen treasures have never turned up—23 years and counting… read more...
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Every now and then in the annals of history one comes across incredible stories of great courage and heroism. Such is the story of Captain Lawrence Oates, who on March 17, 1912, stepped out of an Antarctic expedition’s tent into a blizzard, knowing full well he was walking to his certain death. Oates realized his weakened condition was slowing down his three companions and increasing the chances they would not survive the return trip (the party had reached the South Pole on January 18). Oates told the men: “I am just going outside and may be some time.” Then he stepped out, and was gone. read more...
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The state of Maine is rugged country, with its rocky North Atlantic shoreline, mountainous, heavily-forested interior, and demanding winters. Its people are hardy, as they have to be in coping with its weather and geography. This tenacity served Maine’s citizens well in their early 19th century fight for statehood, because their application for admission into the Union triggered a nationwide debate over slavery. read more...
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St. Paul, Minnesota, was buzzing on March 14, 1884, because an unusual and very important visitor had arrived: Sitting Bull, a chief and holy man of the Hunkpapa Lakota Indians, wanted to see firsthand a large city and the ways of the whites. Once a powerful warrior and a fierce defender of his people and their land, Sitting Bull had been one of the principal leaders of the large encampment of Lakota and Cheyenne that George Armstrong Custer attacked on June 25, 1876. That ill-fated attack cost Custer his life, along with 267 of the men he led that day. read more...
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On March 13, 1906, pioneering activist Susan B. Anthony died at the age of 86. Anthony spent much of her long life involved in the anti-slavery, temperance, and women’s rights movements—especially the latter, in which she became a leader in the drive to secure women's right to vote.
When she was 52, Anthony was arrested, tried and convicted for the crime of daring to vote in the 1872 Presidential Election. She persisted in her efforts with unwavering dedication, declaring a few years before she died that national women’s suffrage “...will come, but I shall not see it.” read more...
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Around 3:30 the morning of March 13, 1964, one of the most infamous murders in American history occurred when Winston Moseley stabbed Catherine “Kitty” Genovese to death in Queens, New York. While the murder was awful enough, what shocked America were reports that 38 neighbors witnessed the assault and heard her screams—yet no one lifted a finger to help her or even bothered to call the police. Nearly 50 years later, there is still a great deal of confusion surrounding this murder case. read more...
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When Franklin Delano Roosevelt was inaugurated as the nation’s 32nd president on March 4, 1933, the United States was in the midst of the economic collapse known as the “Great Depression.” Roosevelt knew he had two formidable tasks before him: fix the nation’s economy, and restore the people’s confidence. He set to work at once tackling both challenges. read more...
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In his infamous March 7th “Plea for Harmony and Peace” speech before the U.S. Senate, Daniel Webster called upon his great talent as an orator to urge support for the Compromise of 1850. However, his words did not convince everyone that the U.S. Constitution protected the rights of slave owners to capture escaped slaves. Four days later, on March 11, New York Senator William H. Seward sardonically remarked to the Senate the following statement, as published by the Daily Atlas (Boston, Massachusetts) on March 15, 1850: read more...
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Four days after Daniel Webster’s infamous March 7th “Plea for Harmony and Peace” speech, in which the famed speaker had urged his Senate colleagues to support the Compromise of 1850, New York Senator William H. Seward gave a moving speech of his own on the Senate floor. A committed abolitionist, Seward denounced Webster’s contention that the U.S. Constitution protected the rights of slave owners to capture escaped slaves. read more...
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Debate in the U.S. Senate over the Compromise of 1850 grew heated, as pro-slavery and abolitionist forces clashed repeatedly. Some senators argued that the U.S. Constitution protected slavery. Massachusetts senator and famed orator Daniel Webster went further, insisting in a speech on March 7, 1850, that the Constitution protected the right of slave owners to hunt down, capture, and bring back into bondage any escaped slave—and that all Northerners had a legal obligation to assist Southerners in the capture. read more...
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