On March 12, 1912, in Savannah, Georgia, Juliette Gordon Low did something quietly revolutionary. She gathered a small group of girls—just eighteen in all—and introduced them to a radical idea for the early twentieth century: girls should learn leadership, self-reliance, and outdoor skills just…
Read MoreOn March 12, 2009, Bernard L. Madoff, once a respected figure on Wall Street, pleaded guilty to orchestrating the largest Ponzi scheme in history. His admission in a Manhattan courtroom marked the downfall of a financier who had previously served as chairman of Nasdaq…
Read MoreFranklin D. Roosevelt’s Fireside Chats were a series of radio broadcasts delivered by the 32nd President of the United States to the American people during the turbulent years of the Great Depression and World War II. FDR used this innovative form of communication to…
Read MoreOn March 11, 1861, in Montgomery, Alabama, delegates from the seceded Southern states adopted the Constitution of the Confederate States of America, a document that at once resembled and diverged from the United States Constitution it sought to replace. Written in the opening weeks…
Read MoreThe Lend-Lease Act, enacted by the United States on March 11, 1941, marked a significant shift in the nation’s foreign policy leading up to its direct involvement in World War II. This landmark legislation was a pivotal step in providing military and economic assistance…
Read MoreOn March 11, 1708, Queen Anne exercised her royal prerogative in what would become the final instance of a British monarch vetoing legislation. She withheld Royal Assent from the Scottish Militia Bill, marking a historic moment in the evolving balance of power between the…
Read MoreOn March 10, 1661, the political landscape of France shifted in a way that would shape the course of European history for decades. With the death of Cardinal Jules Mazarin, the powerful chief minister who had governed France during the minority of King Louis…
Read MoreJean Calas, a French Huguenot merchant from Toulouse, became the focal point of one of the most notorious miscarriages of justice in 18th-century France. His trial and execution, driven by religious intolerance and judicial brutality, ignited widespread outrage and became a pivotal case for…
Read MoreThe Battle of the Aegates, fought on March 10, 241 BCE, marked a decisive moment in the First Punic War between Rome and Carthage. This naval engagement occurred near the Aegates Islands, located off the western coast of Sicily. The clash between the Roman…
Read MoreOn March 9, 1776, a Scottish philosopher published a book that would reshape the intellectual foundations of economics and politics for centuries to come. The author was Adam Smith, and the book—The Wealth of Nations—offered a sweeping explanation of how nations grow prosperous. With…
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