June 28, 2013
Fine-Feathered Friends
In nineteenth century New York, women flocked to shops to buy hats adorned with exotic bird feathers. Eventually, though, they started to wonder if such adornment was necessary—or ethical.
Read MoreMay 4, 2025
June 28, 2013
In nineteenth century New York, women flocked to shops to buy hats adorned with exotic bird feathers. Eventually, though, they started to wonder if such adornment was necessary—or ethical.
Read MoreJune 18, 2013
A thirteenth-century town in France worshiped a greyhound as a saint, but the loyal dog was just one in a line of venerated pets.
Read MoreJune 15, 2013
A young girl in London is mistaken for a troglodyte by taxonomist Carl Linneaus, as he maps out the human species.
Read MoreJune 01, 2013
Nearly seventy miles northeast of Paris, there are over twenty cemeteries where the bodies of mostly unidentified German, British, and Italian soldiers are buried from the first World War. There is also Oise-Aisne American Cemetery and Memorial, the final resting place for over six thousand Americans that lost their lives during the Great War, many of whom fell upon the very ground where their last earthy remains lay during Third Battle of the Aisne. It was during that bloody battle that a stray dog became the most decorated canine in American military history.
Read MoreMay 27, 2013
In Victorian London, rat-baiting was both a necessity and a sport.
Read MoreMay 11, 2013
Poodles might have a reputation for being pampered house dogs, but their strength and intelligence has led them to be the prized canine friends of John Steinbeck, Winston Churchill, and Vladimir Putin.
Read MoreMay 10, 2013
In 1952, Charles Mingus uses his cat Nightlife to teach the rest of us how to get felines to use indoor plumbing.
Read MoreMay 05, 2013
One can hardly visit the main page of any social networking site without being bombarded by the accomplishments of an adorable pet, but pride in one’s animal friends stretches far beyond the digital age. In 1895, a British weekly magazine released a collection of letters detailing the amazing accomplishments of dogs.
Read MoreApril 10, 2013
Animals have long been used for physical labor—but what does it mean to do a job, and not truly comprehend it?
Read More2023:
Fitness instructor carves his girlfriend’s name into the Colosseum.
c. 1850:
Thompson of Sunderland makes his mark on Pompey’s pillar.
2023:
Writers on strike search for romance at the picket line.
c. 1945:
Young communists engage in party matchmaking.