12 Stories From History We Don't Usually Hear About

12 Stories From History We Don't Usually Hear About

Setareh Janda
Updated April 15, 2025 134.3K views 12 items
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Vote up all the stories that you're surprised to be just now hearing.

Sure, everyone has heard about the sinking of the Titanic, Henry VIII's serial marriages, and Cleopatra's fall. But what about tales of unknown history, like those of an unsung freedom fighter, a nuclear test that went horribly wrong, or the man who made sure D-Day would be a success?

From a clan of killers to a fearless spy whose accomplishments haven't gotten the attention they deserve, these forgotten accounts represent exciting, tragic, and dark moments of history. Some are lesser-known prologues or epilogues to famous events; others depict history on an intimate, human scale. Like unknown historical figures who should be remembered, each of these forgotten historical stories expand, deepen, and complicate our understanding of the past.

So read on and vote up the most surprising pages from history we don't often hear about.  


  • Captain Witold Pilecki Volunteered To Go To Auschwitz Undercover To Expose Nazi Crimes

    Witold Pilecki, an army captain who joined the Polish resistance during World War II, wanted to uncover what the Nazis were up to at the Auschwitz concentration camp. So in 1940, he made sure he was arrested: he joined a crowd of people the Nazis were rounding up in Warsaw.

    Pilecki indeed found himself at Auschwitz. He later reported on what happened when he arrived there:

    Together with a hundred other people, I at least reached the bathroom. Here we gave everything away in bags, to which respective numbers were tied. Here our hair of head and body were cut off, and we were slightly sprinkled by cold water. I got a blow in my jaw with a heavy rod. I spat out my two teeth. Bleeding began. From that moment we became mere numbers - I wore the number 4859.

    While at Auschwitz, he smuggled out reports about the camp and organized a secret resistance movement. Pilecki eventually escaped from the camp in 1943 and survived the war.

    1,922 votes
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  • The Young Couple Who Were Guests Of The Lincolns At Ford's Theatre Lived Their Own Violent Story
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    The Young Couple Who Were Guests Of The Lincolns At Ford's Theatre Lived Their Own Violent Story

    When Abraham Lincoln was shot during a play at Ford's Theatre in April 1865, he and his wife Mary were not the only people in the Presidential Box: the Lincolns had invited Henry Rathbone, a young major in the US Army, and his fiancée Clara Harris to join them that tragic night.

    After John Wilkes Booth quietly slipped into the box and shot Lincoln, Rathbone attempted to apprehend him; Booth cut him with a dagger before fleeing the scene. Rathbone survived.

    Rathbone and Harris married in 1867, but the ghost of the assassination loomed over their marriage and took a heavy toll on Henry's mental health. In 1883, he shot Clara before attempting to take his own life. She didn't survive.

    After the attack, Henry was committed to an institution

    1,367 votes
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  • The Last Person To Receive A Civil War Pension Passed In 2020
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    The Last Person To Receive A Civil War Pension Passed In 2020

    The Civil War may have ended in 1865, but its legacy still echoes into the 21st century. One example of this was an American still receiving a Civil War pension until her passing in 2020, 155 years after the war officially ended. Her name was Irene Triplett.

    She was born in North Carolina in 1930 to Mose Triplett, an 83-year-old ex-Confederate who defected to the Union army. He passed eight years later, and his monthly pension of $73.13 ultimately became Irene's. 

    1,748 votes
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  • A Congressman Gave Sensitive Info At A Press Conference During World War II, Leading To The Loss Of American Life

    In 1947, Representative Andrew May was convicted of war profiteering during World War II. But that wasn't the only stain on his wartime experience.

    During the conflict, the Kentucky congressman's position on the House Committee on Military Affairs meant that he routinely heard sensitive and classified information. During a press conference in 1943, he didn't keep some of that information to himself: he told the press that the Japanese navy didn't have their explosives calibrated correctly, so American submarines protected themselves by traveling out of range.

    The Japanese heard May loud and clear and quickly recalibrated their explosives. Suddenly, they had better success bringing down American submarines.

    Charles Lockwood, a naval commander during WWII, believed May's carelessness may have contributed to the loss of 10 submarines and 800 sailors.

    1,142 votes
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  • A Double Agent During World War II Fed Lies To The Nazis That Helped The Allies Successfully Invade France

    Juan Pujol Garcia learned an important lesson during the Spanish Civil War: you have to fight fascists. So when World War II began, Garcia knew he couldn't sit on the sidelines. He offered his services as a spy to the British in 1942, but didn't get the job.

    That didn't hamper Garcia's ambitions - he became a spy anyway. He ingratiated himself with German officials and posed as a spy sending reports from London.

    Finally, the British realized he was an asset and welcomed him aboard. As a double agent, Garcia fed incorrect information to the Germans, and they ate it up. 

    Garcia's greatest feat was in 1944, when he convinced the Germans that D-Day was not the main Allied invasion of France. He advised the Germans to reserve their troops for the big show, which would happen later and further north near Calais. 

    Thus, the Allies met with less German resistance in June 1944 than they would have without Garcia's intervention.

    1,166 votes
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  • Members Of The Osage Nation Were Awash In Oil Money - Until Their Neighbors Started Killing Them
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    Members Of The Osage Nation Were Awash In Oil Money - Until Their Neighbors Started Killing Them

    In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the oil boom made many people rich. Among the beneficiaries were members of the Osage Nation in Oklahoma - the royalties they received for the oil drilled on their land made them wildly wealthy. As David Grann, author of Killers of the Flower Moon, explained to NPR:

    [...] the Osage would receive a check every four months. Initially it was for maybe $100, and then it grew to [$]1,000. But then it continually grew. And by the 1920s, the Osage collectively had accumulated millions and millions of dollars. In 1923 alone, the Osage received what today would be worth more than $400 million. They had become the wealthiest people per capita in the world.

    By the early 1920s, members of the Osage Nation were being targeted for their oil wealth and murdered. As Grann recounts in his book, the investigation into the crimes led to the founding of the FBI.

    1,124 votes
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