The subredditInteresting to Readis all about mysterious, weird, and otherwise unconventional facts from around the world. Although this online community was created only in November 2023, it has already grown to 215,000 members—a testament to the need for an alternative to the recycled brain rot we see in reels on the apps that dominate our screen time. So, if you also want to learn random information that might save your pub trivia team one night, keep scrolling!This post may includeaffiliate links.
The subredditInteresting to Readis all about mysterious, weird, and otherwise unconventional facts from around the world. Although this online community was created only in November 2023, it has already grown to 215,000 members—a testament to the need for an alternative to the recycled brain rot we see in reels on the apps that dominate our screen time. So, if you also want to learn random information that might save your pub trivia team one night, keep scrolling!
This post may includeaffiliate links.
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By keeping their farms running and paying their taxes and mortgages, he ensured the families didn’t lose everything. He was even shot at for supporting them.
He got shot 5 times, saved 20 classmates inside the room, and went on to make a full recovery.
French was the first black swimmer to receive the Navy medal of heroism in 1943.
As the family grew, the older children got more responsibilities and Parton the fourth of 12 children had to look after her younger siblings. Today, she spends her millions on those in need.
In 1961, she and a group of Freedom Riders were arrested in Mississippi for “disturbing the peace” and held at a maximum security prison. There, Mulholland sat on death row before she was ultimately released. But despite the harrowing experience, she refused to abandon the civil rights movement. Months later, she became the first white student to enroll in the historically Black Tougaloo College. While there, she met Martin Luther King Jr. and participated in sit-ins at segregated diners, where she endured abuse from countless white supremacists and segregationists.Though Mulholland is now 79 years old, she has remained active in modern civil rights causes as much as she can. “I’m not marching anymore,” she said. “My knees have been operated on too much. But I can make signs. I can offer to put people up in my house.”
The 23-year-old immediately sprinted to the scene, stripped down, and dove into the sewage-strewn water to save as many people as possible.Despite near-zero visibility, Karapetyan swam 15 feet down to reach the trolleybus only to discover there was no open window. So, he decided to kick the rear window out, lacerating his legs in the process. Over the next 20 minutes, Karapetyan managed to bring 37 people to the surface, 20 of whom survived. Another nine escaped on their own through the window he’d broken open.Karapetyan’s heroism left him with permanently-scarred lungs after he developed pneumonia, and he spent the next three weeks in a hospital bed before he could walk again. But the following year, he participated in two final competitions — where he won a gold medal and broke his 11th world record — before retiring for good.
His band would also provide equal pay and treatment for black musicians. It was through his relentless and tireless efforts that Las Vegas quickly became integrated.In an interview in 2016, Frank Sinatra, Jr. had this to say about his father: “In the days when Las Vegas began to become popular, the black performers could play in showrooms, but they couldn’t stay in the hotel. And it was Frank Sinatra who went to the board of directors, who had rather shady pasts, and he said, ‘Are you guys going to come into the twentieth century, or aren’t you?’… Somebody said ‘Well, we have white people, we have black people.” Sinatra, the story goes, said to them, ‘The money is green. How about that?’ And they began to look at each other, and the wheels were turning, and because of Sammy (Davis), Las Vegas became integrated.
His only condition was that he wanted his beloved dog next to him even after death. The museum honored his request.
He bought the home and then resold it to the Negro veteran.The veteran and young family moved in and their house was attacked., shot at and bombed. The veteran had a young wife and a two year old child.
In 1925, a deadly diphtheria outbreak affected the lives of 10,000 + in Nome, Alaska. With the weather to harsh to fly in the anti-toxin. Togo the Husky lead the sledge dog team that delivered the serum, traversing 674 Miles at 12 years old.
Consisting of young women aged just 17 to 26, they overcame extraordinary misogyny to fly some 30,000 deadly missions.
It was only then, upon cleaning the room out, that they discovered paintings. Drawings. Etchings. Writings, endless pages and papers… Darger literally created thousands of pieces of art.A novel spanning nearly 15,000 pages. He had been incredibly productive, for well over sixty years. And most remarkable of all? He had never told a soul. He lived and died in Chicago, Illinois, and for his entire life, he kept his art a secret to the world.Henry Darger lived for 81 years. Each day after he clocked out at work, he went home to create art at night. Hours upon hours of writing, revising, drawing, etching. He left no family and the landlord became a multi-millionaire selling the works. Darger is now one of the world’s most famous “outsider artists”. And died never knowing it.
The elite society event was known for showcasing the latest creations to the public, but no one had ever seen fashion like this before.Dressed in blue, white and tan creations, according to the newspapers, spectators called the three women a “monstrosity”, accused them of being half-naked and showing revolting cleavage. It was these three dresses, however, that forever changed fashion that day and launched the twentieth-century silhouette.The creator was Jeanne Margaine-Lacroix, a young Parisian designer who had taken over her mother’s historic fashion house and was starting to gain popularity in turn-of-the-century Paris for her corseted dresses featuring minimal boning and thicker material. elastic.Long before Lycra or Spanx came along, she soon began making dresses made of stretch silk jersey, which outlined the hips and thighs and slimmed the figure. To present her creations to society, she hired three beautiful models and chose the Parisian runways of 1908 as her catwalk.
This 600-year-old painting is one of the most mysterious in history. That mirror at the back is just 3 inches wide — yet it reflects the entire room in immense detail.Look closer at it and you’ll realize nothing is as it seems…Jan van Eyck’s masterpiece is an ordinary portrait: Italian merchant Giovanni Arnolfini and his wife, Costanza.
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The evening after Margorie was buried, grave robbers showed up and began digging. Unable to get the ring off the finger, they decided to cut it off. As soon as it was cut, Margorie awoke from her coma and shot up into a sitting position screaming at the top of her lungs.The fate of the grave robbers remains unknown. One story says that the men fell dead on the spot, while another says that they fled and lost all trace of them.Margorie climbed out of the hole and headed back to her house.Her husband John, a doctor, was at home with the children when he heard a knock on the door. He said to the children, “If your mother were still alive, I would swear that she was knocking her.“When he opened the door and found his wife standing there, dressed in her funeral clothes, dripping blood from her finger, he fell dead to the floor.He was buried in the same place that Margorie had vacated.
Green filed a complaint with the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Commission, a landmark case that ended up in the United States Supreme Court which ruled in Greens favor and helped dismantle racial discrimination in the American passenger airline industry.While David Harris was the first Black pilot hired with a major airline, Marlon Green’s fight for the right to be in the flight deck cleared a path for generations of Black pilots to come. In 2010, Continental dedicated a 737 named for Captain Marlon Green. The aircraft, N77518, still flies for United today.
In a time when “car” was not even a word yet, and people relied on horses to pull their wagons, one woman challenged the status quo. To prove to the world that her husband’s invention was the future of mobility, Bertha Benz went on the first long-distance journey with an automobile, facing all kinds of challenges but stopping at nothing. The rest, as they say, is history.Tired of her husband’s endless tinkering, Bertha Benz undertook the first long-distance journey in an automobile demonstrating its revolutionary potential.On August 5, 1888, Bertha Benz was the first person to drive an automobile over a long distance. She brought worldwide attention to the Motorwagen, the precursor to modern-day automobiles. Although her husband, Karl Benz, is celebrated on paper as the inventor, it was Bertha’s money, marketing and chutzpah that put his car on the map.Born Bertha Ringer in 1849 to a wealthy German family, she married engineer Karl in 1872. Bertha used her family money to finance her husband’s creation of a horseless carriage. Under modern day law, Bertha would have actually owned the patent rights. However, German law in the 1880s prohibited married women from even applying for a patent
Growing suspicious of the sitter’s actions, the parents of 7-month-old Finn Jordan hid an iPhone under the sofa to capture audio, which led to the sitter’s conviction.
He is now a motivational speaker at 42 years old.
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Sadly, she was chosen because of her friendly, and docile demeanor.
In fact, Risikat is the only child of her parents born with this condition.She met her husband Abdul-Wasiu Omo-Dada and apparently, he accepted her and loved her just the way she was.But trouble began when she gave birth to their first child who also has blue eyes. It seems that her husband accepted her only because he expected their children to have black eyes like most black people.Later, Risikat gave birth to a second child with the same condition.Due to pressure from her family and her disappointment, her husband decided to abandon his family.
A creepy medieval painting in Italy might hold the oldest-known image of this horrifying creature.Imagine a 2- to 3-foot long (0.6- to 1-meter) worm slowly working its way out of your body… with the possibility of other worms doing so in the future. Such is the horror of the guinea worm, which has been plaguing mankind for millennia.Some of the oldest guinea worms are known from the calcified remains of one found in an ancient Egyptian mummy and another possible case mentioned in the Old Testament of the Bible. Now, scientists are studying a painting from an Italian church with what appears to be the oldest image of a guinea worm – one coming out of the leg of a 14th century French saint.The worm is not presently known in Italy, and its range is limited to the countries of South Sudan, Chad, Mali, and Ethiopia in Africa, where great progress has been made in eradicating them. Although it is painful, the worm does not k**l the parasitized person.The parasitic condition is called dracunculiasis. It seems to be clearly depicted in the altarpiece in the Painting Gallery in Bari in the southern Puglia region of Italy. The painting is of St. Roch, a 14th century Frenchman who legends say visited Italy and healed plague victims, but who later got the plague himself.
The autopsy discovered that Whitman had a pecan-sized tumor pressing against his amygdala, a brain structure that regulates fear and aggression.
It all happened at Lake Otero, a large Ice Age lake, the shore of which was teeming with wildlife such as mammoths, ground sloths, camels, dire wolves, American lions, and other extinct megafauna.The trail they left behind, located in present-day White Sands National Park in New Mexico, spans 1.5 km and comprises over 400 human footprints, giving the oldest evidence of human presence in the Americas and reshaping our understanding of when the first humans arrived there.
A massive rescue operation was launched and rescuers found Alan Lee Philips stranded in a snow drift. It was in the middle of a sever snow storm and the temperature had dropped down to -22. If it wasn’t for the passenger in the plane Alan wouldn’t have survived the night.Alan literally had someone watching over him. For 40 years Alan’s story has been hailed as miraculous, that was until D.N.A linked Alan to two cold case m*****s of two Colorado women.It was Jan. 6, 1982, a bitter cold evening with blizzard-like conditions, when two female hitchhikers vanished from the popular ski resort town of Breckenridge, Colorado, and were later found shot to death.*On that ill-fated day, Barbara Jo Oberholtzer, and Annette Kay Schnee vanished without a trace. It wasn’t until six months later, when Annette’s lifeless body was found, that investigators made a chilling connection. Annette wore an orange sock, a recent gift from her mother, and her other orange sock was discovered near Bobbie Jo’s body. This grim discovery left no doubt that the same person had taken the lives of both women.
Her body was never found. Her family held a memorial in 2001.However, during Fraser’s 2003 trial, Natasha was found alive, hiding at her boyfriend’s house, where she had been living voluntarily since her disappearance. She even testified, confirming she never met Fraser.
The Mystery of Nicholas Barclay and His Imposter, Frédéric Bourdin.In 1994, a 13-year-old boy named Nicholas Barclay from Texas went missing after playing basketball with his friends. Three years later, he was found in Spain and reunited with his family. But something wasn’t right.The boy who came back wasn’t Nicholas Barclay—he was a 23-year-old Frenchman named Frédéric Bourdin, a master imposter. This strange and twisted story has puzzled people for almost 25 years.
Adele’s story moved the world: her unrequited love for the English soldier Albert Pinson led her to follow him to Nova Scotia, where he manipulated and abandoned her, leaving her with nothing in New York.Returned to France, Adele was broken, humiliated and swore to remain silent forever. Her father, Victor Hugo, tried for 35 years to get her to speak again, but was unsuccessful.For 65 years, from 1850 until her death in 1915, Adele remained silent, to remind herself never to fall in love again.
Sir Ernest Shackleton, in his book “South” described the phenomenon for the first time in 1919. He was convinced that a disembodied companion joined him and his men during the last leg of his 1914-1917 Antarctic expedition.The team was stuck in the pack ice for more than two years and endured immense hardship in their attempts to reach safety. Shackleton wrote, “during that long and torturous march of thirty-six hours over the nameless mountains and glaciers of South Georgia, it often seemed to me that there were four of us, not three.“In recent years, well-known adventurers such as mountaineer Reinhold Messner and polar explorers Peter Hillary and Ann Bancroft have reported experiencing the phenomenon.
David Hampson is known as the ‘Silent Man’Criminals come in all shapes and forms but they usually talk during interrogation, or at least offer an obligatory ‘no comment’. But not this man.Known as the ‘Silent Man’, David Hampson has wrecked havoc on the Swansea commuter community with his incessant road blockages.Hampson’s penchant for standing in the middle of a roach to block traffic has landed him in jail multiple times, but he just keeps doing it.Apparently, the 53-year-old is totally mute as he commits the offence, during the police interview and even at court.
In 1986, Hofmann and her boyfriend Marco made a trip to Kenya. There, she met a Samburu wàrrior named Lketinga Leparmorijo and instantly found him irresistible. She left Marco, went back to Switzerland to sell her possessions, and, in 1987, returned to Kenya, determined to find Lketinga, which she eventually did. The couple moved in together, married, and had a daughter.Hofmann moved into her mother-in-law’s manyatta (compound) and learned to live as a Samburu woman, fetching wood and water. She opened a small shop in the village, to sell basic goods.Hofmann suffered several hàrdships, including disèases (mainly malaria) and marital problems. Increasingly paranoid jealousy from her husband, possibly a side effect of his addiĉtion to the d.rug khat (miraa), severely dàmaged her relationship, and in 1990 she decided to return to Switzerland for good, taking her daughter with her. Later on, she wrote a book about her experiences. The book, titled The White Massai, became a phenomenal success. It has been translated into several languages, and in 2005, made into an eponymous movie starring Nina Hoss and Jacky Ido.
On July 9, 1993, Toronto lawyer Garry Hoy was performing his favorite party trick: throwing himself through the windows of his office to prove they were indestructible. But this time, his stunt backfired.On the 24th floor of the Toronto-Dominion Bank Tower, Garry Hoy’s incredible story begins and ends. The story has been widely reviewed online, but what happened is pretty simple.On July 9, 1993, a reception was held for law students interested in apprenticing at Holden Day Wilson. Garry Hoy was giving a tour and decided to demonstrate his favorite party trick: throwing himself through the windows of the Toronto-Dominion Bank Tower so the students could see how strong the glass was.Hoy had performed the stunt in front of an audience countless times before. In addition to demonstrating the strength of the windows, it was clear that he enjoyed showing off a bit.On his first attempt, Hoy bounced off like every other time, but on his second attempt, something happened that left everyone horrified.
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