
The HistoryNet Podcast
1) Nobody wanted the A-10 Warthog — now It's the military's most beloved plane
The A-10 Warthog has survived repeated attempts to put it out to pasture. Now its time may finally be up.
Nobody wanted the A-10 Warthog — now It's the military's most beloved plane
22:10 | Mar 15th, 2024
2) They were sent on a suicide mission at Cedar Creek. Their victory rallied the Union.
The fierce clash proved to be a fitting coda for the resolute 8th Vermont.
They were sent on a suicide mission at Cedar Creek. Their victory rallied the Union.
12:00 | Mar 14th, 2024
3) They say he burned down the Reichstag. But was he drugged into confessing?
Mystery surrounds the infamous burning of the Reichstag in 1933.
They say he burned down the Reichstag. But was he drugged into confessing?
10:35 | Mar 13th, 2024
4) Kars fortress stands as a monument to a turbulent past
For centuries Armenian residents of the Transcaucasian stronghold of Kars watched invaders come and go—until its final betrayal.
5) This journalist risked his life to reveal the horrors of lynching in the South
Lynching investigator Walter White risked everything to tell Americans the truth.
This journalist risked his life to reveal the horrors of lynching in the South
19:57 | Mar 11th, 2024
6) John Fetterman isn't the first ill politician to serve. Here are examples from history
From the Founding Fathers to the present day, illness has impacted politics.
7) The death of Crazy Horse: Fables and forensics
Just who killed the Lakota fighting man remains in dispute.
8) The Ercoupe is easy to fly — but you better not be in a hurry
It was supposed to be an airplane for the people.
9) These Civil War warriors fought with the pen, and not the sword
Partisan poets stoked the fire to keep the South’s combat spirit alive.
10) The mysterious death of Johnny Ringo
The gunman’s body was found beneath a tree, pistol in hand—but was it suicide?