Current Date: 26 Jul, 2025
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The Mysterious Final Hours of Edgar Allan Poe

In October 1849, legendary writer Edgar Allan Poe was discovered in a disturbing state on the streets of Baltimore—disoriented, incoherent, and wearing someone else’s clothes. Taken to a hospital, Poe never regained enough clarity to explain what had happened to him. He died just days later, uttering vague, cryptic words that only deepened the mystery surrounding his final moments. No official cause of death was ever confirmed, and theories have ranged from alcohol poisoning and rabies to foul play or even political kidnapping schemes like “cooping.” Over 170 years later, Poe’s bizarre and tragic end remains one of the most haunting literary mysteries of all time, fittingly shrouded in the same gothic darkness that defined his work.

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Keith Sapsford: The Story of 14-Year-Old Stowaway

Keith Sapsford: The Story of 14-Year-Old Stowaway

The final image of 14-year-old Australian Keith Sapsford, who aspired to travel the world. In February 1970, he sneaked into the wheel-well of a plane flying from Sydney to Tokyo. It opened mid-air & fell out. When a photographer was testing a new lens, he captured this moment on film and was surprised when it developed.

Abraham Crijnssen – The Ship That Disguised Itself As An Island

Abraham Crijnssen – The Ship That Disguised Itself As An Island

During World War II a Dutch minesweeper evaded the Japanese for eight days disguised as an island. The crew covered the decks in cut trees and painted exposed surfaces to look like rocks. They moved only at night and anchored closed to shore by day, eventually escaping to Australia.

The Remarkable story of jazz bassists Henry Grimes, lost but found as janitor and reclaimed the spotlight

The Remarkable story of jazz bassists Henry Grimes, lost but found as janitor and reclaimed the spotlight

Henry Grimes, one of the most versatile jazz bassists, disappeared in the 1960s and was later presumed dead. However, a jazz-loving social worker found him in 2002 working as a janitor in a hotel. Grimes found his way back into the limelight when a fellow musician sent him a bass as a gift. In 2016, he received a lifetime achievement award.

Franz Ferdinand’s Assassination that sparked World War I

Franz Ferdinand’s Assassination that sparked World War I

Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife Sophie are shot to death by a Bosnian Serb nationalist during an official visit to the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo on June 28, 1914. The killings sparked a chain of events that led to the eruption of World War I by early August.

Bolivia’s San Pedro Prison runs without guards inside—prisoners govern, work, and live with their families.

Inside San Pedro: The Self-Run Prison Society of Bolivia
The accidentally discovery of Riace bronzes

The accidentally discovery of Riace bronzes

Stefano Mariottini was snorkeling off the coast of Monasterace near Riace in 1972 when he noticed a human hand sticking out of the sand and called the police, thinking it was a corpse. It was actually two statues of "Warriors from Riace" - 5th century BC Greek bronze statues.

Ancient Egyptians Had Pregnancy Tests Over 3500 Years Ago

Ancient Egyptians Had Pregnancy Tests Over 3500 Years Ago

The ancient Egyptians used a pregnancy test that involved potentially pregnant women peeing on barley and wheat seeds. Plant growth indicated pregnancy: barley for a boy and wheat for a girl. Later tests revealed that pregnant women's urine causes plant growth 70% of the time, whereas non-pregnant women's urine does not.

The story behind Glasgow's iconic Duke of Wellington statue and its well-known traffic cone hat

The story behind Glasgow's iconic Duke of Wellington statue and its well-known traffic cone hat

The city of Glasgow spends approximately £10,000 every year to remove traffic cones from the head of the Duke of Wellington statue. The Duke of Wellington statue, which first appeared in the early 1980s, has worn an orange traffic cone hat for decades. but how did it get there - and more importantly how did it stay?

30 Best Funny Ironic Accidents of All Time

30 Best Funny Ironic Accidents of All Time

We know we shouldn't laugh at other people's misfortunes, yet we can't help but laugh because of the tragedy, humorous, or just plain funny images. The irony is a cruel mistress but we recognize that there is a point at which you should be able to laugh at it; after all, humor is the best medicine! We hope that the persons in these cases escaped with only minor injuries. Some of these circumstances seem to be risky, and something serious may have occurred, so we hope this list does not offend anyone.

30 Interesting Facts About Sleep

30 Interesting Facts About Sleep

What makes you sleep? Okay, we know it seems like a simple question with a simple answer, but scientists have yet to completely understand it. In reality, it should have been on our list of the 25 greatest historical mysteries. Researchers have been able to track brain waves and learn a little bit about what goes on in our heads at night using advanced technology for the last few decades.

Quaker Oats Fed Children with Radioactive Oatmeal

Quaker Oats Fed Children with Radioactive Oatmeal

In the 1940s and 1950s, Quaker Oats and MIT conducted experiments on radioactive iron and calcium-containing cereal. The diet was part of a study to see if the nutrients in Quaker oatmeal traveled throughout the body. In January 1998, a $1.85 million settlement was reached for 30 victims who came forward.