In 1864, President Abraham Lincoln signed the Yosemite Land Grant, which changed the American landscape forever

The Vintage News May 7, 2018 E.L. Hamilton In 1864, as the Civil War raged across the divided states, President Abraham Lincoln took time away from military matters long enough to sign a two-paragraph bill that would change the course of American landscape forever. The Yosemite Land Grant was the first ever to set aside land … Read more

North of Munich, the oldest continuously operated brewery, founded by monks, is nearing its 1,000th birthday

The Vintage News Apr 19, 2018 E.L. Hamilton If you want to talk the history of beer over a pint, what better place than the world’s oldest continuously operating brewery? Forty miles due north of Munich, braumeisters at the Weihenstephan Abbey have been boiling hops for nearly 1,000 years. And the seeds of beer history were planted even … Read more

Half blind Bob Bell, who faked his vision test to get into the Marines, later became TV’s best loved Bozo the Clown

Mar 29, 2018 E.L. Hamilton The Vintage News Bozo the Clown. Photo: Getty Images The partially blind man who became the most popular Bozo the Clown of all bluffed his way into the Marines during WWII. How? He passed the vision test by memorizing eye charts. Bob Bell wasn’t the only red-haired, red-nosed, floppy-shoed Bozo. But … Read more

Drakelow Tunnels: an underground compound in England, built in 1941, that holds many secrets

Feb 27, 2018 Nikola Budanovic The Kingsford Country Park in Worcestershire, England, appears not to be much different from any other park across the country. It covers an area of 200 acres in a pine and broad-leaved forest, offering a beautiful natural resort. But beneath the woodland lies the true secret of Kingsford Park: 3.5 miles … Read more

The ship in the burial mound: the Gokstad ship, a splendidly preserved 9th century Viking vessel

Mar 19, 2018 Stefan Andrews One of Norway’s greatest archaeological finds takes us back to the late 19th century when two youngsters reportedly decided to have some fun by starting to dig in what people of the area called “the king’s mound.” A prominent mound indeed, its location was a farm in the Sandefjord municipality, slightly to … Read more

Favorite animals of Catherine the Great, cats have inhabited the Hermitage Museum for the last 250 years and some are believed to have healing powers

The Vintage News Dec 23, 2017 Magda Origjanska The State Hermitage Museum in Russia’s Saint Petersburg, one of the most famous art museums in the world, has a staff including numerous specialists in sculpture, history, painting, but also, believe it or not, a special kind of four-legged specialists that work under the Jordan Staircase in the … Read more

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