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Former Nazis on Social Security

October 19, 2014 – A two-year investigation by the Associated Press has found that dozens of Nazi SS guards and other war criminals expelled from the U.S. have received millions of dollars in Social Security benefits.  At least four are still collecting. Link: SeattleTimes Additional Photos  (click thumbnails to enlarge) [divider]

Daughter of Black Confederate Veteran Buried with Honors

October 18, 2014 – A memorial service was held today for Mattie Clyburn Rice, who died recently at the age of 91.  Her ashes were buried in the grave of her father, Weary Clyburn, a Confederate Civil War veteran.  Rice had fought for years to have his service to the Confederacy recognized.  A slave before and […]

Rare Film Footage of 1924 World Series Found

October 2, 2014 – Rare footage of the Washington Senators beating the New York Giants in the 1924 World Series was recently found tucked away in the rafters of a garage in Worcester, Massachusetts.  President Calvin Coolidge attended the 12-inning game seven.  The film, on one of eight reels turned over to the Library of Congress, […]

Northeast’s Declining Clout in Washington, D.C.

September 30, 2014 – Below-average population growth in the Northeast has brought diminished political clout in Washington, D.C.  The population in Northeastern states has risen by 15 percent since 1983, but it has risen by 41 percent in the rest of country.  In 1950 the states from Pennsylvania to Maine had a total of 141 […]

California Compound Built for Hitler

September 30, 2014 – In the 1930s, Nazi sympathizers in California expected Hitler’s quest for world domination to be successful, so they purchased a 55-acre ranch near Los Angeles, made improvements, and lived on the estate hoping to one day hand it over to their Fuhrer.  The day after Pearl Harbor, federal agents raided the compound and […]

Federal Government Settles Land Dispute with Navajos for $554 Million

September 25, 2014 – The 27,000-square-mile reservation of the Navajo Nation encompasses parts of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.  The tribe leases much of the land for mining, farming, grazing, housing, and oil and gas operations.  Navajos disputed the compensation they received when the federal government oversaw the leases.  The Navajo Nation has now agreed to settle the case […]

Indiana Community Celebrates One-Room Schoolhouse from 1879

September 18, 2014 – A small town in Indiana is celebrating the 25th anniversary of a project that gives children a break from modern technology and takes them back to a simpler time.  In 1989 the people of Hope, Indiana, began restoring a one-room schoolhouse built back in 1879.  Children, who may attend the school […]

Group Patriotic Photographs from First World War

August 28, 2014 – During World War I, the U.S. military worked with photographer Arthur Mole to produce incredible images, some with thousands of participants positioned up to a half-mile from the camera. Link: DailyMail Additional Photos  (click thumbnails to enlarge) [divider]