On May 27, 1813, American forces captured Fort George, a key British stronghold on the Niagara frontier, in one of the most successful U.S. operations of the War of 1812. The victory came at a moment when the United States was trying to recover…
Read MoreOn May 27, 1703, Tsar Peter I—later styled “the Great”—ordered the construction of a fortress on a mosquito-infested island at the mouth of the Neva River. In doing so, he planted the imperial standard for what would become Saint Petersburg, a city forged not…
Read MoreOn May 26, 1940, one of the most dramatic operations of World War II began on the beaches and harbor of Dunkirk, France, as Allied forces, trapped by the German advance in northern France, launched a desperate evacuation across the English Channel. The operation,…
Read MoreBy late spring 1865, the Confederacy was collapsing in pieces. Richmond had fallen, Lee had surrendered at Appomattox, and President Jefferson Davis was a fugitive. Yet the vast expanse of the Trans-Mississippi—stretching from Texas to Arkansas and parts of Louisiana—remained a Confederate holdout, largely…
Read MoreOn May 25, 567 B.C., Servius Tullius, the sixth king of Rome, celebrated a triumph over the Etruscans, marking one of the earliest recorded moments in which Rome presented itself not merely as a surviving city, but as an expanding power in central Italy.…
Read MoreOn May 25, 1961, in a bold speech delivered before a special joint session of the United States Congress, President John F. Kennedy issued a challenge that would define a generation and redirect the trajectory of American science, industry, and global prestige. Speaking just…
Read MoreOn May 24, 1487, a 10-year-old boy named Lambert Simnel was crowned in Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin, taking the name Edward VI in one of the most audacious attempts to overthrow England’s new Tudor king. The ceremony was not a childish fantasy. It…
Read MoreOn May 23, 1998, the people of Northern Ireland did something that years of diplomacy, decades of violence, and generations of bitterness had made seem almost impossible: they voted for peace. In a referendum held across Northern Ireland, roughly three-quarters of voters endorsed the…
Read MoreOn May 24, 1844, a slender copper wire running between the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., and a Baltimore train depot carried more than just electrical signals—it bore the weight of a new era. At precisely 8:45 a.m., inventor Samuel F. B. Morse, seated…
Read MoreOn May 22, 1872, President Ulysses S. Grant signed the Amnesty Act into law, taking one of the most consequential steps of the Reconstruction era toward restoring political rights to former Confederates. The law did not settle the central conflicts of Reconstruction. It did…
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