
Why Abandoned Beer Caves Keep Causing Sinkholes in Iowa
In the summer of 2014, a sinkhole in downtown Cedar Rapids cracked open a forgotten chapter of American history. Beneath the city, engineers discovered vast brick-lined chambers—19th-century beer cave...
9 Elo 202514min

America’s Lost Funeral Trains | The Forgotten Tradition
What happens when the dead need to travel? In the 19th century, booming cities like London ran out of burial space—and the solution wasn’t underground. It was on the rails. In 1854, the London Necropo...
7 Elo 202520min

Why This Machine Crushed Coal—And People | The Huber Breaker
The Huber Breaker wasn’t just another coal-processing plant—it was a steel giant capable of crushing 7,000 tons of anthracite coal every single day. Built in 1939 as the last great hope for Pennsylvan...
2 Elo 202513min

The LA Neighborhood That Fell Into the Sea | Sunken City
In the 1920s, San Pedro’s Point Fermin was a coastal paradise—bungalows perched on ocean bluffs, palm-lined streets, and Red Car trolleys connecting it all. But by 1929, the ground beneath this dream ...
31 Heinä 202516min

Why You’ll Be Arrested for Visiting the Hollywood Sign
1923, workers hauled thousands of lightbulbs, steel beams, and lumber up a steep canyon to advertise a housing development called Hollywoodland. Meant to last just 18 months, the sign survived collaps...
26 Heinä 202520min

Before London’s Tube: The Lost Victorian Hyperloop
In the 1860s, London built a futuristic underground network that few people remember today. Long before the Tube or Mail Rail, the Pneumatic Despatch Company operated a series of capsule trains—powere...
24 Heinä 202513min

Why This Stone Was Meant to Be the Center of the World | America’s Forgotten Meridian
Hidden just steps from the Washington Monument lies a granite marker most people overlook—but this modest stone was once meant to become the center of the world. The Jefferson Pier Stone, placed in 18...
19 Heinä 20259min

The Graveyard of the Pacific | America’s Most Dangerous Coastline
At the edge of the Pacific Northwest lies one of the deadliest stretches of water in North America—the Columbia Bar, where the Columbia River meets the Pacific Ocean. This isn’t just a river mouth—it’...
17 Heinä 202514min






















