History Shorts
It started with a pig. In 1859, on a small island in the Pacific Northwest, an American farmer shot a British-owned pig that had wandered into his garden. What followed wasn’t just a neighborly dispute—it nearly sparked a war between the United States and Great Britain. As tensions escalated, both sides rushed troops and warships to San Juan Island, each refusing to back down over a boundary neither could fully define. For weeks, two global powers stood on the brink, their soldiers staring each other down… all because of a single dead pig. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ...
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When Mariya Oktyabrskaya’s husband was killed fighting the Nazis, she didn’t just mourn—she took action. Selling everything she owned, she wrote directly to Joseph Stalin with an extraordinary request: let her fund a tank… and drive it into battle herself. Amazingly, Stalin said yes. What followed was one of the most remarkable—and overlooked—stories of World War II. Trained as a mechanic and tanker, Mariya took to the front lines in her self-funded T-34, repairing it under fire and fighting with a determination fueled by personal loss. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ...
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What if the best self-help advice wasn’t written yesterday — but over 700 years ago? Historian Peter Jones joins us to explore how concepts like pride, envy, sloth, and lust were used as diagnostic tools for the mind, offering timeless strategies for confession as therapy, mastering destructive impulses, and finding inner balance. 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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In 1565, one small island became the frontline of a clash that would shape the future of Europe. When the Ottoman Empire launched a massive invasion of Malta, the Knights of St. John—outnumbered and outgunned—prepared for what seemed like a final stand. For months, brutal assaults, relentless artillery, and desperate hand-to-hand combat pushed the defenders to the brink of collapse. Forts fell. Thousands died. And yet, against all odds, Malta did not break. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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He gave the world The Iliad and The Odyssey—epics that have endured for nearly three thousand years. But according to legend, Homer’s life didn’t end in triumph… it ended with a question he couldn’t answer. The story goes that while traveling, Homer encountered a group of fishermen who posed a simple riddle. When he failed to solve it, the weight of that failure—whether from pride, frustration, or something deeper—proved too much to bear. SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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In the late 19th century, a distant island kingdom became the center of one of America’s most heated political debates. Was the annexation of Hawaii a bold step toward global power—or the unjust overthrow of a sovereign nation? As American businessmen tightened their grip on the islands, Queen Liliʻuokalani fought to preserve Hawaiian independence. Meanwhile, in Washington, politicians, presidents, and the public were deeply divided: should the United States expand across the Pacific, or stay true to its anti-imperial roots? SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN...
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Before TikTok, before livestreams, and long before instant communication with home, there was one organization dedicated to bringing a piece of America to those serving far from it—the United Service Organizations, better known as the USO. Born in the anxious days before the United States entered World War II, the USO quickly became a lifeline for millions of servicemen and women. From makeshift stages in war zones to packed auditoriums on military bases, Hollywood’s biggest stars—Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, and countless others—traveled across oceans and into danger to deliver something...
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In June 1977, one of the most infamous prisoners in America briefly slipped through the bars of one of the nation’s toughest prisons. The man was James Earl Ray—the convicted killer of Martin Luther King Jr.—and his escape sent shockwaves across the country. Ray had been serving a 99-year sentence at Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary, a fortress-like facility tucked deep in the mountains of Tennessee and widely considered one of the most secure prisons in the United States. Yet on June 10, 1977, Ray and six other inmates managed to break out, launching one of the largest manhunts in...
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When Americans think of the leadership of the American Revolutionary War, one name immediately comes to mind: George Washington. But before Washington ever took command of the Continental Army, another man briefly held that title—and today, he is largely forgotten. That man was Artemas Ward, a Massachusetts general who found himself suddenly leading the rebel forces in the earliest days of the revolution. In the chaotic aftermath of the Battles of Lexington and Concord in April 1775, colonial militias surrounded British forces in Boston. Someone had to organize and command this improvised...
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What can the ruins of Pompeii really tell us about the people who lived there—and whose stories have been forgotten for nearly two thousand years? In this episode of the History Shorts Conversation Series, host Peter Zablocki sits down with historian and classicist Jess Venner to discuss her new book, The Lost Voices of Pompeii. While Pompeii is one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world, Dr. Venner argues that the traditional story of the city has long overlooked the lives of its most ordinary residents. Follow Jess on Instagram: Buy the Book: ...
info_outlineWhen Mariya Oktyabrskaya’s husband was killed fighting the Nazis, she didn’t just mourn—she took action. Selling everything she owned, she wrote directly to Joseph Stalin with an extraordinary request: let her fund a tank… and drive it into battle herself.
Amazingly, Stalin said yes.
What followed was one of the most remarkable—and overlooked—stories of World War II. Trained as a mechanic and tanker, Mariya took to the front lines in her self-funded T-34, repairing it under fire and fighting with a determination fueled by personal loss.
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