A. Gustave Eiffel, Part 2

A. Gustave Eiffel, Part 2

The second part of our look at Gustave Eiffel's life picks up just after he closed down all business interests in South America, and leads into some of his most famous work, including the Statue of Liberty and the Parisian tower that bears his name.

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Episoder(2634)

Civil War Spies: Allan Pinkerton

Civil War Spies: Allan Pinkerton

Allan Pinkerton fell into detective work when he discovered a gang of counterfeiters in Illinois. In 1861, he helped thwart a plot to assassinate Abraham Lincoln, which may have led Lincoln to later t...

27 Jun 201120min

Alan Turing: Codebreaker

Alan Turing: Codebreaker

Alan Turing, conceived of computers decades before anyone was building one. He also acted as a top-secret code breaker during World War II. Despite his accomplishments, he was prosecuted as a homosexu...

22 Jun 201120min

Ned Kelly's Last Stand

Ned Kelly's Last Stand

Bushrangers, a type of bandit, troubled Australia until the late 1800s. Ned Kelly, the most famous bushranger, became an outlaw in 1878, and his gang successfully conducted several raids. Tune in to l...

20 Jun 201119min

Huguette Clark: The Copper Kings and the Recluse Heiress

Huguette Clark: The Copper Kings and the Recluse Heiress

Recently deceased heiress Huguette Clark was reclusive -- she hadn't been photographed since 1930. Her father was the wealthy William Andrews Clark, whose political battles started the War of the Copp...

15 Jun 201120min

James Strang: The King of Beaver Island

James Strang: The King of Beaver Island

In 1850, James Strang was crowned king of Michigan's Beaver Island. He got the opportunity to lead after meeting Joseph Smith and converting to Mormonism. After Smith's death, Strang tried to step in ...

13 Jun 201117min

Cahokia: North America's First City?

Cahokia: North America's First City?

Most people have heard of great South and Central American empires, but Mississippian civilizations are more obscure. At its peak, the Mississippian city known as Cahokia was bigger than London. So ho...

8 Jun 201116min

Paul Morphy: Who was the pride and sorrow of chess?

Paul Morphy: Who was the pride and sorrow of chess?

Bobby Fischer called Paul Morphy "the greatest chess genius in history," By age 20, he earned recognition as America's best player after winning the nation's first chess championship tournament in 185...

6 Jun 201118min

Princess Caraboo: Imposter from Javasu

Princess Caraboo: Imposter from Javasu

When a mysterious woman sporting a turban showed up in England, people took her for a foreign beggar. But she claimed to be a princess who had been kidnapped by pirates! Eventually, however, the truth...

1 Jun 201117min

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