Jean 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 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…
Read MoreThe U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in United States v. The Amistad on March 9, 1841, was a pivotal moment in American legal history, addressing issues of slavery, international law, and human rights. The case involved a group of Africans who had been illegally enslaved,…
Read MoreOn March 8, 1775—barely six weeks before the first shots of the American Revolution—a small but incendiary essay appeared in the Pennsylvania Journal and Weekly Advertiser. The piece carried no author’s name. Its title, however, left little doubt about its subject: “African Slavery in…
Read MoreMalaysia Airlines Flight 370 vanished from radar on March 8, 2014, becoming one of aviation’s greatest mysteries. The Boeing 777-200ER, carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew, departed from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing but disappeared less than an hour into the flight. After reaching a…
Read MoreOn March 7, 1850, Senator Daniel Webster of Massachusetts delivered one of the most significant speeches in American history, later known as the “Seventh of March” speech. Speaking at a time of deep national division, Webster endorsed the Compromise of 1850, a contentious set…
Read MoreOn March 6, 1975, American television audiences witnessed a pivotal moment that reshaped public perception of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination. For the first time, the Zapruder film—captured by Dallas dressmaker Abraham Zapruder on November 22, 1963—was broadcast in motion on national television. The…
Read MoreOn the evening of March 5, 1963, country music lost three of its brightest voices in a tragedy that stunned the industry and sent shockwaves through the American South. A small Piper PA-24 Comanche aircraft carrying three celebrated performers—Patsy Cline, Hawkshaw Hawkins, and Cowboy…
Read MoreWinston Churchill’s speech at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri, on March 5, 1946, stands as one of the most significant addresses of the early Cold War. In this speech—formally titled The Sinews of Peace but better known for coining the phrase “Iron Curtain”—Churchill articulated…
Read MoreOn March 4, 1909—the same day he took the oath of office—President William Howard Taft faced an awkward constitutional puzzle. The man he wanted as secretary of state, Philander C. Knox, appeared to be barred from the job by the very document Taft had…
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