History Shorts
For much of American history, the nation’s military was not overseen by a single unified department. Instead, it was divided between separate branches like the United States Department of War and the United States Department of the Navy, each operating with its own leadership and priorities. But the global demands of the 20th century—especially the challenges of World War II—revealed that modern warfare required something new: coordination. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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In the chaos of civil war, one man rose from relative obscurity to rule England without a crown. Oliver Cromwell, a Puritan soldier and fierce opponent of royal authority, emerged as one of the most powerful figures in 17th-century Europe after the English Civil War toppled the monarchy of Charles I of England. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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Long before Hollywood dramatized it, New York City in the mid-19th century was a battleground of rival gangs, political machines, and neighborhoods fighting for control of the streets. In crowded districts like the Five Points, waves of immigrants, poverty, and rapid urban growth created the perfect conditions for organized street violence. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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In the late 19th century, one naval officer reshaped how the world understood power itself—not through speeches or battlefield heroics, but through a book. Alfred Thayer Mahan, a U.S. Navy captain and historian, argued that national greatness depended on control of the seas. His landmark work, The Influence of Sea Power upon History, would go on to transform military strategy across continents. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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It’s small. Portable. Affordable. Easy to slip into a coat pocket or toss into a suitcase. But the paperback book didn’t just change how we read—it changed who could read. Before the 20th century, books were often expensive, heavy, and inaccessible to the average person. Then came the paperback revolution. Publishers like Penguin Books in Britain and Pocket Books in the United States transformed literature into something democratic—sold at train stations, drugstores, and newsstands for just a few cents. Suddenly, classics, thrillers, romances, and political treatises were within reach...
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In this gripping Conversation Series episode, historian and investigative author Sara Vladic joins History Shorts to discuss her explosive new book, The Dangerous Shore: How a Motley Crew of Scientists, Mobsters, Double Agents, Retirees, Volunteer Pilots (and a Boy Scout) Stopped the Invasion of America. This is not the World War II story you learned in school. DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE AND LEAVE A RATING OR A REVIEW! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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The war was over—but for thousands of American soldiers stationed overseas, the fight felt far from finished. In late 1945 and early 1946, frustration boiled over among U.S. troops waiting to be brought home from Europe and the Pacific. Promised rotation systems and swift demobilization seemed painfully slow. Out of that anger emerged what became known as the “Bring Daddy Home” movement—peaceful but highly organized demonstrations by servicemen demanding what they believed they had earned: a ticket home. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED...
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The Underground Railroad was a vast, secret network of safe houses, guides, abolitionists, and ordinary citizens who risked fines, imprisonment, and even death to help enslaved people escape bondage in the American South. Conductors like Harriet Tubman led daring nighttime journeys through forests and across rivers, while stationmasters opened their homes in quiet defiance of the law. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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Were America’s Founding Fathers devout Christians, skeptical deists, or something more complicated? The answer is far less simple—and far more interesting—than modern debates often suggest. Figures like George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison lived in an age shaped by Enlightenment thought as much as traditional faith. Some attended church regularly; others questioned miracles and edited scripture. Yet together they built a nation whose Constitution famously separated church from state—while also invoking “Providence” in moments of crisis. SUPPORT THE...
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Before the United States officially entered World War II, a small band of American volunteer pilots took to the skies over China to fight a war that wasn’t yet theirs. Known as the Flying Tigers, this daring group—formally the American Volunteer Group—became legendary for their shark-faced fighter planes and their fierce defense against Japanese air assaults in 1941 and 1942. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
info_outlineIn 1969, amid urban inequality, educational gaps, and a rapidly changing America, a revolutionary idea took shape: what if television could teach—and teach every child, regardless of background?
The result was Sesame Street—a bold experiment that blended entertainment with rigorous educational research, puppets with purpose, and joy with social responsibility. From Big Bird and Cookie Monster to lessons on letters, numbers, empathy, and loss, the show didn’t just entertain generations of children—it reshaped childhood itself.
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